Page 43 - AVN July 2015
P. 43

Have you watched the
documentary ‘Hot Girls Wanted’
I feel that it was accurate enough; it
showed what happens to a lot of girls
who choose to do porn for the wrong
reasons—like escaping their problems,
fast and “easy” money—then realize it
comes with a much larger price.
—Abella Danger
Quite frankly I’m sickened by the way
Hot Girls Wanted portrayed girls getting
into the industry. Although they
mentioned “amateur” several times,
any civilian watching isn’t going to
understand that that’s only half of the
story. … Some of the scenarios spoken
about in the film—such as flying all the
way out to L.A. for a blowjob only to
find out last minute that it’s a “forced
blowjob” that the performer had no
desire to participate in—would NEVER
happen professionally. I always have
100 percent of my information before
the shoot, and the free will to decline
anything I don’t want to do.
—Aria Alexander
in the movie that she didn’t like the
scenes she was shooting, but never
once did she say “no,” that she didn’t
want to shoot. She accepted those jobs
and any consequences are her own.
From my start in the industry, I did my
research and I looked into what I would
be doing and who with. Any smart and
business-savvy girl would do the same.
—Paisley Parker
and if so,
how do you feel about
This is my more personal opinion
of the film. I am going to say, I cried
the way it
almost the whole film. I cried because
that was me in the beginning. I had
portrays girls
been to those same places, met the
same people, and shot for the same
companies. I was told the same things
getting into
and had my mind filled with all the
same thoughts. Then I traveled to Los
the industry?
Angeles and signed with 101 Modeling,
which is still my agency at present,
and realized how much different the
industry was. I have felt much more
comfortable and encouraged shooting
porn in Los Angeles with a licensed
agency and bigger productions. To
sum it up, this film is a very good
description of how the porn industry
works in Florida, but not how the entire
porn industry actually is.
—Kate England
I found it pretty apparent that Jill
Bauer, Ronna Gradus and Rashida Jones
intentionally showcased a group of
inexperienced female performers which,
for the most part, didn’t seem well
informed—both by their agent, and by
themselves. It’s beyond important to
know what you’re getting into before
you throw yourself into it, otherwise
you’re making yourself vulnerable
to getting taken advantage of, which
is repeatedly shown throughout the
documentary.
I feel like it portrayed what goes on
in Miami, but not Los Angeles, which
are two different worlds. Florida is
home to a lot more amateur-style
shooting. I thought it was portrayed
negatively because it focuses on the
in-and-out girls rather than girls who
came into the industry to make a
name for themselves. At the end, it
showed a couple of girls’ success story
and I wish they would have focused
on them.
—Alice Green
Couldn’t get through five minutes of
it without tearing up. Basically it’s
showing the truth on how girls get into
the industry, small-town girls, beautiful
girls. Girls with hopes and dreams and
girls with no goals or [who] hope to get
out of a small town where they have no
future, like myself.
—Kacy Lane
>>
I feel that it doesn’t accurately portray
women who are serious about the adult
industry as a job. These girls did not
know what they were getting them-
selves into. Any sex worker should be
confident in their sexuality, and know
when they are not comfortable in cer-
tain situations. “Ava Taylor” expressed
As Seen In ... Abella Danger in Big Round Asses
(Airerose), Alice Green in Babysit My Ass 5 (Joey
Silvera/Evil Angel), Aria Alexander in Restraint 2 (New
Sensations) Kacy Lane in Too Big for Teens 16 (Reality
Junkies/Mile High), Kate England in Better Than Mom
(Kelly Madison/Juicy), Paisley Parker in Girls Night Out
(Wicked Pictures), Yhivi in Cum Swallowing Auditions
17 (Amateur Allure/Jules Jordan Video)
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