profile

A New Formula

Early this year, Jack Mardack hit the road to do some marketing for Earl Miller. Mardack, who had already been an affiliate manager and webmaster of AdultFriendFinder.com, visited some strip clubs during the marketing trek and found something he wasn't expecting.

"I was surprised to see how much adult content figures into that experience," he said. "They give people DVDs with lap dances and things like that. I saw that on one side, I had associates who ran affiliate programs and always were looking for new traffic sources, and on the other side, this untapped, virgin territory of consumers of adult material. It was just a matter of building a bridge, and the optimal arrangement was a website that I controlled, which also served as a directory of businesses and a place where customers can visit to make purchases. It would also be a means to giving retail stores a presence online, so customers can find their businesses."

The result of this inspiration is Pornacre.com, a conventional affiliate site that's covered with banners and galleries but which is part of a very original twist in the online retail business.

Mardack has gone back to distributing physical DVDs to the retailers — free of charge — in a new business model that benefits the stores, their customers, the sponsors and Pornacre.

"I began to get promotional DVDs from people who I knew that ran sponsor programs," Mardack said. "I just asked for some of the stuff they had sitting around, gathering dust. It was a natural fit for them, because I gave them customers that they would not have had otherwise in the physical realm. This allowed them to circumvent the normal difficulties of distribution.

"Usually, you have to convince individual store-owners to give you shelf space for your DVDs, whereas I walk in the door and say to the retailers, 'Here, this is all free.' So now those DVDs are going home with the consumer, right along with the most popular titles. The customer is happy, the store owner is happy and the sponsor is happy."

The new scheme is so beneficial to all involved, Mardack is amazed that no one had thought of it sooner. He believes the key lies in the physical content, the DVDs, and how that propagates into untapped marketplaces.

"It worked," he said. "I take it upon myself as the affiliate to put the content into a form that benefits the sponsor program. That means dressing up some DVDs that I get for free from the sponsors in my own branding, and putting them out in the places where customers are likely to be found — adult video stores, head shops, massage parlors and strip clubs — places where age verification is already going on.

"Most of adult is very friendly in the online realm, because there's rich measurement and precise return on investment, but there was a big gap of opportunity," Mardack said. "There was no effort to touch the customer, other than at the point of sale on the computer. So the result is a vast area of neglect in marketing. I thought, since I'm able to function fundamentally as an affiliate and offer sponsors access to the kind of marketing that they're not taking advantage of — which gives them access to a customer who is extremely qualified — I can give a qualitative difference in the kinds of advertising, and a quantitative increment in being able to reach traffic of a different but very desirable sort. That was the genesis of the idea."

Mardack took his first stab at the scheme through Steve Lightspeed, who had produced a lot of demo reel giveaways. After hearing Mardack's proposal, Lightspeed put a couple of thousand pieces in his hands, which he in turn placed in a wide variety of adult businesses. Of course, Mardack didn't mention that he wasn't absolutely sure it would work in the beginning.

"I had doubts whether the costs were going to be covered," he said. "I made investments up front to secure routes of distribution, and had people working for me at different locations in the U.S. I'd walk into video stores and make the pitch, and the reception was universally great. All they had to do was put a sticker on their window with my branding on it, and agree to receive a weekly or monthly box of DVDs they'd be free to distribute, but not sell, to their customers as they saw fit."

In the beginning, Mardack admits that the product wasn't very good, since it consisted mainly of trailers with no full scenes. So he went back to the sponsors and convinced them to give him full scenes, trusting that the risk of piracy would be low due to the nature of the customers who would be receiving it. Now that system has morphed into something more streamlined, in which Mardack makes his own DVD duplications from masters he receives from the sponsors.

"In the beginning, I was dealing with thousands of pieces that had been sitting in office closets," he said. "They were just being used to hand out to webmasters at trade shows, and they never got to the customer. But now I see that it's more cost-effective for me to take the content in some unfinished form, and to actually produce the DVDs myself. This way I can have them produced closer to the ultimate destination, so there's no reason to ship DVDs from San Francisco, where I live, to New York. I just ship a master and have them reproduced there and distributed to stores locally."

Mardack claims the feedback he's been getting from store-owners, sponsors and even customers has been glowing.

"The store-owners are excited because now they see that this revitalizes adult retail as an advertising channel, and that money is likely to flow," he said. "They're seeing that this does heal the separation that took place between the online adult business and the offline adult. And the sponsors are happy because their content gets a new lease on life, and their brand goes places it never went before. They're sourcing customers from realms that they never thought they could touch for free."

And what's in all this for Jack Mardack and Pornacre?

"I'm happy," he said. "I'm branding the site, and I'm making money as an affiliate. And I've got a cool idea to boast about in XBIZ."

Copyright © 2025 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

opinion

WIA Profile: Lainie Speiser

With her fiery red hair and a laugh that practically hugs you, Lainie Speiser is impossible to miss. Having repped some of adult’s biggest stars during her 30-plus years in the business, the veteran publicist is also a treasure trove of tales dating back to the days when print was king and social media not even a glimmer in the industry’s eye.

Women in Adult ·
opinion

Fighting Back Against AI-Fueled Fake Takedown Notices

The digital landscape is increasingly being shaped by artificial intelligence, and while AI offers immense potential, it’s also being weaponized. One disturbing trend that directly impacts adult businesses is AI-powered “DMCA takedown services” generating a flood of fraudulent Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) notices.

Corey D. Silverstein ·
opinion

Building Seamless Checkout Flows for High-Risk Merchants

For high-risk merchants such as adult businesses, crypto payments are no longer just a backup plan — they’re fast becoming a first choice. More and more businesses are embracing Bitcoin and other digital currencies for consumer transactions.

Jonathan Corona ·
opinion

What the New SCOTUS Ruling Means for AV Laws and Free Speech

On June 27, 2025, the United States Supreme Court handed down its landmark decision in Free Speech Coalition v. Paxton, upholding Texas’ age verification law in the face of a constitutional challenge and setting a new precedent that bolsters similar laws around the country.

Lawrence G. Walters ·
opinion

What You Need to Know Before Relocating Your Adult Business Abroad

Over the last several months, a noticeable trend has emerged: several of our U.S.-based merchants have decided to “pick up shop” and relocate to European countries. On the surface, this sounds idyllic. I imagine some of my favorite clients sipping coffee or wine at sidewalk cafés, embracing a slower pace of life.

Cathy Beardsley ·
profile

WIA Profile: Salima

When Salima first entered the adult space in her mid-20s, becoming a power player wasn’t even on her radar. She was simply looking to learn. Over the years, however, her instinct for strategy, trust in her teams and commitment to creator-first innovation led her from the trade show floor to the executive suite.

Women in Adult ·
opinion

How the Interstate Obscenity Definition Act Could Impact Adult Businesses

Congress is considering a bill that would change the well-settled definition of obscenity and create extensive new risks for the adult industry. The Interstate Obscenity Definition Act, introduced by Sen. Mike Lee, makes a mockery of the First Amendment and should be roundly rejected.

Lawrence G. Walters ·
opinion

What US Sites Need to Know About UK's Online Safety Act

In a high-risk space like the adult industry, overlooking or ignoring ever-changing rules and regulations can cost you dearly. In the United Kingdom, significant change has now arrived in the form of the Online Safety Act — and failure to comply with its requirements could cost merchants millions of dollars in fines.

Cathy Beardsley ·
opinion

Understanding the MATCH List and How to Avoid Getting Blacklisted

Business is booming, sales are steady and your customer base is growing. Everything seems to be running smoothly — until suddenly, Stripe pulls the plug. With one cold, automated email, your payment processing is shut down. No warning, no explanation.

Jonathan Corona ·
profile

WIA Profile: Leah Koons

If you’ve been to an industry event lately, odds are you’ve heard Leah Koons even before you’ve seen her. As Fansly’s director of marketing, Koons helps steer one of the fastest-growing creator platforms on the web.

Women in Adult ·
Show More