profile

SOMA

California's San Fernando Valley is home to so many adult production companies that it is known as Porn Valley. But 400 miles north sits another district jam-packed with adult businesses. The area of San Francisco that lies south of Market Street, dubbed SOMA by the locals, is populated by a sizable percentage of the major players in the gay adult film industry.

In many ways, it makes sense that the gay adult industry revolves around San Francisco.

"San Francisco is the epicenter of the gay universe," Titan Media Vice President Keith Webb says. "We [adult companies] all know each other, we all work together and we all share resources. It makes working here very easy. Where else in the world does your local city supervisor swing by the set to say hello and check out the action? It's a queer- and porn-friendly town."

He isn't kidding. Porn heavyweights such as Falcon Studios, COLT, Treasure Island Media, Titan Media, Hot House and Raging Stallion are all based within a few short blocks of each other. They share neighborhood space with Internet giant NakedSword, the top U.S. gay VOD site with a library of more than 3,500 titles.

Many studio executives echoed Webb's sentiment about SOMA's prominence in the gay adult world, citing a sense of community as being a major draw, an attribute that is only eclipsed by the area's talent. The San Francisco studios have a large pool of willing models to draw from, and the studios often have no problems sharing models with each other.

"We get flooded with models who want to be in our films," Treasure Island Media's Saul Austin says.

Founded in 1998 by Paul Morris, Treasure Island has gained notoriety for its wall-to-wall condom-less or "bareback" content. Despite the controversial nature of the company's films — bareback content being the subject of one of the most heated debates in the gay community — Treasure Island's films maintain a healthy spot on top 10 rental lists. These films with an underground feel are heavily sought after by retailers and distributors worldwide, thanks in part to the performers the company attracts.

"San Francisco is full of hyper-sexual men who want to be in porn just for the thrill of it. A lot of them specifically moved here because they wanted to see how far they could take the concept of sexual freedom," Austin says. "Exhibition is a natural extension of that. We don't have 'actors' in our movies — our models aren't in it to be stars. They are participants in what is essentially a documentary. I think San Francisco fosters that kind of energy."

All About Location
The welcoming and scenic area around San Francisco affords studios interesting and cost-efficient backdrops for their films. And the city proper lends itself to all kinds of shoots. Fairs on well-worn streets like Folsom and Harrison are full of roaming studios. Crews often film the action as people have public sex, then pass out model release forms and collect IDs. Films being shot on SOMA rooftops are common, as are camera crews leaving hotels with sweaty, exhausted talent in tow.

"We have endless possibilities here as far as filming locations go," Falcon's Troy Prickett says. Falcon Studios, which was started as a mail-order service more than 30 years ago by Chuck Holmes during the "Golden Era" of gay San Francisco, has grown to become the leading producer of gay adult films. "We can be deep in the redwoods just an hour north of here, be in the snow a couple hours to the East and be on a beach in no time at all."

San Francisco also can "play" other cities thanks to its diverse districts that resemble places such as New York City. The similarity is so uncanny that even mainstream studios recognize it. For example, "Rent" was shot in SOMA — and the only thing filmmakers felt was necessary to make the illusion perfect was to scatter garbage everywhere.

Adult studios find the resemblance especially handy since porn companies in New York are finding themselves vilified by the local government.

Spinal Cord Of Porn
With the growing recognition of the gay marketplace and the profits to be reaped from it, SOMA studios are doing quite well for themselves. Despite the ongoing drama with 2257 regulations, 2005 was a good year for gay porn.

Take COLT, for example. John Rutherford, former president of Falcon, bought COLT Studio with his partner, Tom Settle, in June 2003. Since then, the company has skyrocketed into a full-fledged lifestyle brand, with COLT Gear, COLT Mobile, COLT Leather, COLT Publishing, COLT Clothing and an affiliate program, COLT Cash, pushing the brand-recognition barrier to Disneyesque proportions among the gay community.

Others in the industry are seeing similar growth.

Titan, for example, recently moved into a new, 15,000-square foot office and studio complex South of Market. "Having our own studio and soundstage in-house has been a tremendous asset," Webb says. "This gives us a huge advantage in terms of production time and the ability to produce content. This past year we were able to increase our film releases to 18 titles, up more than 40 percent from the previous year."

According to JRL, a website that tracks Internet-based sales and rentals of gay DVDs, the last quarter of 2005 saw a "huge increase in sales [of gay adult DVDs]." Gay adult DVDs tend to be more expensive than straight porn, ranging from $39 to $79 for a full-length DVD, which further illustrates the untapped disposable income of the gay market.

And the trickle-down theory of economics is alive and well in the gay adult industry. Falcon Studios, for example, donates all post-expense profits to the Charles M. Holmes Foundation, which distributes funds to charitable organizations, including HIV/AIDS outreach programs.

Plans For The Future
The growth of the gay SOMA studios in the past year shows no real signs of slowing down. All the studios XBiz spoke with have big plans for 2006.

COLT, which already has household-name status in some spheres, is looking to do the same for it Buckshot offshoot. "We are in the final stages of releasing our new novelty line under the Buckshot brand name, Buckshot Toys," Rutherford says.

Falcon is launching a new line of films under the Mustang brand, which Prickett says will be targeted at the high-end gay DVD market. "The look of the models participating in those films and the production values of those films will evolve over the next few releases starting with 'Trapped,'" he says.

Treasure Island is poised for a full-frontal assault on the market with a huge outpouring of content. "Our directors in New York and Brazil have films ready to roll out, and our San Francisco office has so much footage that our only problem is picking out the best of the best," Austin says. "We'll be ramping up our streaming video site – TreasureIslandVideo.com and the corresponding affiliate program."

Copyright © 2024 Adnet Media. All Rights Reserved. XBIZ is a trademark of Adnet Media.
Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission is prohibited.

More Articles

profile

WIA Profile: Jessica Jasmin

Jessica Jasmin’s heart has always been in production, but there were a number of stops along her route to becoming creative director for Gamma Entertainment.

Women In Adult ·
profile

Legrand Wolf Charts Course to Brave New Carnal Worlds

Since Carnal Media’s inception, the company has launched three distinct streaming networks. It has also expanded its offerings within these networks to 25 studio channels, with 14 in CarnalPlus, eight in BarebackPlus and three in FTMPlus.

Alejandro Freixes ·
opinion

Adult Time Gets 'Heteroflexible' With New Gay Studio

Adult Time is launching its first gay studio, Heteroflexible, which is looking to explore largely uncharted territory by targeting the underserved gay-curious market.

Alejandro Freixes ·
opinion

Ben Rush, Steve Cruz on Hitting Max 'Overdrive' for Raging Stallion

When an eerily quiet driver for rideshare service “Let It Ride” (Derek Kage) makes a routine airport pickup, his passenger (Paul Wagner) begins regaling him with tales of overseas fun with exotic gents.

Alejandro Freixes ·
opinion

'For You, I Will': Disruptive Films Team Talks Erotic Thriller

In the diabolical Netflix series “You,” bookish stalker Joe Goldberg is so obsessively enamored of the women on whom he fixates that he is perfectly willing to commit murder to ensure the object of his laser-focused romantic ambitions becomes his.

Alejandro Freixes ·
profile

Falcon Fuses Classic, Modern Vibes for 'Endless Summer'

Ben Rush waxes rhapsodic about the classic Falcon Studios features that gave rise to the irresistible “California blonde” imagery that defined the venerable studio throughout the 1970s and 1980s.

JC Adams ·
profile

SayUncle Talks Taboo as Niche Network Eyes Long-Term Growth

When Charged Media first decided, several years ago, to gather an array of niche all-male paysites underneath one marketable umbrella, the plan quickly hit one minor stumbling block: what to name the new company.

JC Adams ·
profile

Falcon/NakedSword, Marc MacNamara Unsheath 'The Swords'

When director Marc MacNamara informs us that he is doing our phone interview while lying in his darkened hotel room with compresses on his aching body, he is only half joking.

JC Adams ·
profile

Glamcore Goes Gay With Fresh Paysite Rod's Room

An exploratory pilot episode for what would become the burgeoning new all-male paysite RodsRoom.com first came to life several years ago, under the expansive artistic vision of Adult Time CCO Bree Mills and co-directors Michael Vegas and Siouxsie Q.

JC Adams ·
profile

Performer-Turned-Attorney Stephan Ferris Talks Sex Work, Memoir

Adult industry attorney Stephan Ferris, aka performer Blue Bailey, is on the phone with XBIZ to promote his new memoir, “Blue Movie.” The book is a frank, unsparing account of Ferris’ battles with addiction as he pushed the limits of his sexuality as a gay adult entertainer.

JC Adams ·
Show More