Prude # 39, June 1995 Cover

Prude # 39, June 1995

XXX Magazines June 1995 PREMIUM

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Covergirl Jenna Jameson | Live From The Set Of Virtual Reality 69 | Plus The Interview With Wicked's Hot New Talent | Hamilton Ennui Reviews Bionca's Takin' It To The Limit | Jenna Jameson interviewed by Scott Summers | The Unofficial 'Wild At Wicked" Issue

Details

Publication:
June 1995
Category:
XXX Magazines
Series:
Prude
Issue:
# 39
Format:
PDF
Downloads:
0

Publisher's Note and Features

2 Inexcusable Actions editorial by Michael S. Nova 4 Dear Prude the kinky, real-life adventures of our readers 9 Barenaked Lady a close shave 17 Bride of the Red Column Dress AVN done right by Kensington Smith 25 Jenn-uinely Wicked an interview with Jenna Jameson by Scott Summers 36 VR 69 @ Wicked on the set with Portia Klee Jordan 41 Three Way the name says it all 49 Hot Blooded brush up your latin 57 The Names Have Been Changed erotic fiction by Guin Turner 65 Takin' It To The Limit 4 video review by Hamilton Ennui 73 Black Magic Afternoon abra-cadabra 81 Class Act a rich bitch fantasy 89 The Artisans of Erotica Scott Summers breaks the mold EDITORIAL NOTE INEXCUSABLE ACTIONS I got the call about two weeks ago from a friend of mine in the business. "You didn't hear this from me," she said, "but there's a rumor going around that Barbara Doll has HIV." It didn't take long for me to realize what the possible ramifications of this could be if it turned out to be true. Barbara is a fairly new import from France. She's a good-looking girl with reddish-blonde hair, twinkling eyes, a nice smile, and a deadly disease. In the year or so that she's been in the business, Barbara has worked with virtually every major male performer, usually doing anal in process. If she had managed to infect one of those men, it was possible that he had passed the disease on to dozens of women unknowingly. The ratio of male performers to female performers is about one man for every ten women, so the men have sex with many different women in a short period of time. Of course, the rumor was true. It's too early to tell yet how much damage has been done. We won't know that for a few months at least. However, the most frightening and infuriating thing is this. Barbara knew she was infected, and continued to work. No one is exactly sure how long she knew, but her positive test was done sometime in February, and she was working for VCA in late March. You do the math. All of this came out the next day, after I had made a few mental health calls to some of my other friends in the business, among them Tera Heart, who was one of the last people to work with Barbara. She was so scared, she was going on a drinking binge that night, and I don't blame her. You see, Tera has to wait about four weeks before she can even get tested. Put yourself in her shoes. Imagine having to wait that long before you can even find out whether or not you've gotten HIV from someone who KNEW THEY HAD IT! Almost immediately, the news had spread throughout the entire business. It really is a small community, and there's no news like bad news. Ten minutes after I got off the phone with Tera, I got a call from our publisher. He was having lunch with a well-known director, and wanted to know if I had heard. This having been said, my question is this: Who covered for Barbara? The way the industry works, no one is supposed to be able to perform without showing their test results. Apparently, Barbara claimed that she had forgotten it, or would bring it the next day. I can understand that getting by once, or maybe twice, but for several weeks? She worked for most of the major producers while she was positive, and word never got around that she was being cagey about her test? I don't buy it. Somebody somewhere is covering his ass. It's possible that there may be no longterm impact on the adult community other than a lot of frightened people. Female-tomale transmission is rare, and lesbian transmission has never been documented. Still, if one of the guys got it, this is more serious than we know. The Free Speech Coalition has recommended more stringent testing, and the producers have agreed to comply. The question, I guess, is will they remember? All I can say is, they'd better. Michael S. Nova, Managing Editor
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