Poll Replies (5)
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Replies to the user poll above. |
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1
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Monahan (0)
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Not really accurate. I have a recently made digital copy of The Immoral Mr Teas. I originally had a 16 mm copy which was confiscated during a dorm inspection in 1963 when I was in college.
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08-09-16 01:46pm
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2
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Jay G (Disabled)
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None of the above.
A wonderful 8mm porno a friend brought to my bachelor party in 1969. Had to give it back to him :(
I was renting 8mm stag films back then before home videotape changed the world.
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08-09-16 05:23pm
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3
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lk2fireone (0)
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I'm not sure what the first porn movie I ever saw was.
It depends on what is called porn.
Movies back in the 1960s or 1970s that were considered explicit might or might not be considered porn.
But this was before VHS or DVDs came out.
So to get a current copy of those movies might or might not be possible (as a DVD).
Monahan mentions The Immoral Mr. Teas. This is considered non-porn by some, but porn by others.
Penthouse and Playboy (the magazines) were considered porn by some, but non-porn by others.
But in today's society, I think the old Penthouse and Playboy would be considered non-porn by many. But still considered porn by some.
It depends on what your definition of porn is.
I do have a DVD copy of The Story of O, and a DVD copy of Emmanuelle, two of the first soft-core erotic films I saw in a movie theater back in the 1970s, that I thought were very impressive movies.
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08-10-16 11:39am
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4
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Monahan (0)
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REPLY TO #3 - lk2fireone :
Just to show my age, Esquire magazine was considered rather racy before Playboy started. They dropped the sexy stuff once Playboy got a foothold.
Just another "fun fact;" as recently as 1999, penetration was still not depicted in the "mainstream magazines even though full bore fucking was available in VHS videos and porn movie houses.
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08-10-16 10:38pm
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5
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lk2fireone (0)
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REPLY TO #4 - Monahan :
I don't think I ever went to a porn movie house.
I saw Emanuelle and The Story of O in a 'regular" movie house, which normally showed regular, commercial theatrical movies.
At the time I was living in Augusta, GA, which didn't have any porn movie houses.
This was back in the 1970s.
Augusta didn't have any porn shops, although it did sell X-rated novels in some of its bookstores, back then.
I believe Hugh Hefner worked for Esquire before he founded Playboy.
I never read Esquire, but I'm aware it was a sophisticated men's magazine (still is, as far as I can tell), that was similar to Playboy without the sexy nude photos (high grade fiction, interest in fashion, lifestyle, etc.)
I'm surprised Esquire is still around, when so many other magazines have gone out of business.
The internet is wonderful, but it has killed a lot of newspapers and magazines that were very important.
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08-11-16 01:18am
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