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Help Others Restore Integrity 13 minute read

Ex-Porn Star Tells the Truth About the Porn Industry

Last Updated: February 15, 2024

shelley lubben

This article is a guest post by Shelley Lubben. Shelley, an ex-porn star, was the founder and president of The Pink Cross Foundation from 2008-2016.Through the Pink Cross, Shelley was a missionary to the sex industry, reaching out to adult industry workers offering emotional, financial, and transitional support for those who want out of porn. Her heart was to share the truth about porn and expose the darkness of it.


Chatsworth, California produces 85% of the world’s adult content. All of the top female talent agencies are located in or within the Chatsworth local radius. Female performers are flown or fly to Chatsworth to work in the adult industry. All of the world’s top male talents live or travel to Chatsworth California for work. Every major and minor adult DVD Company is in the local Chatsworth radius. 

The California pornography industry is a destructive, drug-infested, abusive, and sexually diseased industry that causes severe negative secondary effects on female and male adult industry workers as well as the general public. I am confident of the above because not only was I a stripper, pornographic performer, and escort in the California pornography industry from 1986 to 1994, but I have also counseled with or spoken to over 300 female and male workers in the pornography industry as well as those struggling with pornography addiction. 

I have been working with adult industry workers since 2002, when I began volunteering as a teacher and counselor at local rescue missions and prisons in the State of California. I have worked at Madera Rescue Mission, Bakersfield Rescue Mission, Central California Women’s Facility Prison, and Valley State Prison for Women and have traveled throughout the United States as a speaker and counselor on the negative effects of pornography at various churches, recovery programs, and secular organizations. 

General Statistics on the Porn Industry 

In my daily work of assisting women and men recovering from the pornography industry, as well as those struggling with pornography addiction and gathering research over a period of several years, I have learned significant facts to prove that indeed the California pornography industry is causing severe secondary negative effects on adult industry workers as well as the general public, which is involuntarily exposed to pornography, especially children, whose average age of first internet exposure to pornography is 11 years old. 

According to pornography statistics: 

  • It is estimated that there are 4.2 million porn websites—12% of the total amount of sites—allowing access to 72 million worldwide visitors monthly. 
  • One-quarter of the total daily search engine requests, or 68 million, are for pornographic material, where 40 million Americans are regular visitors. 
  • According to comScore Media Metrix, 71.9 million people visited adult sites in August 2005, reaching 42.7 percent of the internet audience. 
  • The United States adult film industry produces 4,000–11,000 films a year and earns an estimated $9–$13 billion in gross revenues annually. 
  • An estimated 200 production companies employ 1,200–1,500 performers. Performers typically earn $400–$1,000 per shoot and are not compensated based on distribution or sales. 
  • Lobbyist Bill Lyon told 60 Minutes that the porn industry employs 12,000 people in California and pays the state $36 million in taxes per year. When 60 Minutes first spoke to Lyon, he was running the free speech coalition, a trade organization that represents 900 companies in the porn business. 

Porn Workers Frequently Receive STDs 

Adult film performers engage in prolonged and repeated sexual acts with multiple sexual partners over short periods of time, creating ideal conditions for transmission of HIV and other sexually transmitted diseases (STDs). All the more concerning, high-risk sex acts are on the rise. 

At the same time, condom use is reportedly low in heterosexual adult films—approximately 17% for adult performers. In 2004, only two of the 200 adult film companies required the use of condoms. Performers report that they are required to work without condoms to maintain employment. 

These practices lead to high transmission rates of STDs and occasionally HIV among performers. After four performers contracted HIV in 1998, Sharon Mitchell, a former adult film performer, founded Adult Industry Medical, a clinic to counsel and screen performers monthly for HIV. 

The current practice of periodic HIV and STD testing may detect some diseases early but often fails to prevent transmission. In April 0f 2004, three performers who had been compliant with monthly screening contracted HIV. At that time, a male performer who had tested HIV negative only three days earlier infected three of 14 female performers. 

What the Performers Say About STDs 

In statements I have received from females and males working in the pornography industry and those who previously worked in the industry, at least 80% admit to catching an STD while working in the California pornography industry. 

  • I personally caught the non-curable disease Genital Herpes in 1994 and was not given any information or help from porn producers or the adult industry. 
  • Jan Meza, a former porn actress who left the porn industry in October 2007, publicly shared of late that she discovered she has Herpes. She is totally devastated in that she caught a non-curable disease. 
  • Belladonna, a well-known pornographic performer states: “99% of the porn industry has herpes.” 
  • One male pornographic performer, Rocco, 600 films and 3,000 women later, says: “Every professional in the porn-world has herpes, male or female.” 
  • Tanya Burleson, formerly known as Jersey Jaxin, caught Chlamydia her first year working. She exclaimed, while speaking with me, “I don’t believe I worked with one person who didn’t at one time have an STD.” Tanya made over 200 movies in her three-year career. She also says, “Performers have to pay for their own testing, their medicine, and lose at least eight days of work every time they catch a sexually transmitted disease.” 

Sexually transmitted diseases are highly prevalent in the pornography industry. Among 825 porn performers screened in 2000–2001, 7.7% of females and 5.5% of males had Chlamydia and 2% overall had gonorrhea. Dr. Sharon Mitchell confirms the STD prevalence in an interview with Court TV, in which she states: “66% of porn performers have herpes, 12-28% have sexually transmitted diseases and 7% have HIV.” 

Why Some Porn Stars Also Work at Escort Services 

Pornographic performers and adult industry workers also often engage in prostitution through escort agencies such as Body Miracle, Dreamgirls, and Porno Star Escorts, where they not only risk sexually transmitted disease but also HIV and hepatitis C infection. 

Pornographic performers usually prefer escorting because the pay is much higher and sex acts are not as degrading or physically demanding. They receive approximately $100 an hour for working in pornographic films or $1500 an hour for escorting. Adult industry workers who are also pornographic performers get paid higher than other adult escorts due to their celebrity status and can book 2-3 hour appointments and make approximately $3000 a day. Agents also lie to women in the adult industry and lure them into prostitution. Porn performer Erin Moore says, “Some agents lie to the girls and tell them they are shooting a scene when instead they set up prostitution acts for them.” 

While I was a pornographic performer in 1993-94, I was flown to different parts of the United States by porn companies where consumers of pornography sometimes paid me thousands of dollars to spend a weekend with them where we engaged in unprotected sex. During one appointment with a man and his wife, we engaged in unprotected sex and I passed the disease to both of them. Pornographic performers and adult industry workers definitely spread sexually transmitted diseases to the general public. 

The Prevalence of Drug Abuse in the Porn Industry 

Another secondary negative effect of the adult industry is the exposure to drugs and drug addiction. Porn actress Erin Moore admits, “The drugs we binged on were Ecstasy, Cocaine, Marijuana, Xanax, Valium, Vicodin, and alcohol.” 

Tanya Burleson, formerly known as Jersey Jaxin, says, “Guys are punching you in the face. You get ripped. Your insides can come out of you. It’s never-ending. You’re viewed as an object—not as a human with a spirit. People do drugs because they can’t deal with the way they’re being treated.” 

One male porn star says on his blog on January 28, 2008: 

“Drugs are a major, major problem in my business. Anyone who says otherwise is lying to you. I can’t tell you the number of girls who have disappeared and dropped out of the business because of their drug problems. It is unbelievably sad to think about, and seeing some of them fall into a downward spiral hurts me more than others. But I think we all can agree that a huge majority of drug users will never change unless they get professional help. 

I have seen all manner of drugs on set, at parties, in cars, everywhere. If I had to guess, I would put marijuana use at 90% of ALL people involved in the industry (performers, directors, crew, agents, drivers, owners, office workers, etc.). 

I have been on a set where a girl has passed out during a sex scene with me (she was abusing oxycontin). Just recently a girl overdosed on GHB (a party drug that is a clear odorless drug that doesn’t mix well with alcohol) on set. I have seen a girl win a prestigious AVN Award, not show up to accept the award, and then fall into the throes of drug use that caused her to lose at least 50 pounds and drop off the face of the earth. 

Why is drug use so prevalent in our business? Well, let’s figure that out. 

First of all, remember that the business is populated largely with girls aged 18-21. And the majority of those girls are uneducated (many haven’t graduated high school). Add to that the fact that many come into the business because they have no money and are working at menial jobs like fast food places. So you have young girls who are uneducated with very little money entering the business. 

Once they are in the business, they are now making ten thousand dollars a month and working maybe five hours a day 10-15 days a month. There are predators out there that can smell these girls and prey on them like sharks. Young, uneducated girls with lots of money, lots of free time, and very little supervision. This is a really bad equation (unless you are a drug dealer of course).” 

All Porn Industry Workers Experience Abuse 

In addition to prevalent drug use, degradation and abuse are rampant in the pornography industry. In one study, 100% of the strippers reported some kind of verbal or physical abuse on their jobs.

Verbal abuse by customers is extremely common with 91% reporting incidents. They were routinely called degrading names. 

Besides the verbal abuse, all endured some type of physical abuse on the job. Despite the fact that it is illegal to touch a stripper, strippers reported that customers: 

  • Grabbed them by the arm (88%) 
  • Grabbed their breast (73%) 
  • Grabbed their buttock (91%) 
  • Pulled their hair (27%) 
  • Pinched them (58%) 
  • Slapped them (24%) 
  • Bit them (36%) 

The strippers are often attacked in front of the strip club bodyguards and other audience members. 

Former pornographic performer Alex Devine shares her violent experience and writes: 

“Donkey Punch was the most brutal, depressing, scary scene that I have ever done. I have tried to block it out of my memory due to the severe abuse I received during the filming. The guy, Steve French, has a natural hatred towards women in the sense that he has always been known to be more brutal than EVER needed. I agreed to do the scene thinking it was less beating, except the ‘punch’ in the head. If you noticed, Steve had worn his solid gold ring the entire time and continued to punch me with it. I actually stopped the scene while it was being filmed because I was in too much pain.” 

There is a very heavy emphasis on rougher, more sadistic sex, with slapping, spitting, violent hair-pulling, and scenes of extremely abusive hardcore sex acts. In one film, the man forces the woman’s head into a toilet during the final scene, a technique that seems to help him achieve climax. 

See Porn and Sexual Violence: 7 Important Facts.

Safe Workplace Laws Aren’t Enforced in California

In California, every employer is required to ensure that employees have a safe working environment. In 1973, the California Occupational Safety and Health Act was enacted to assure safe and healthful working conditions for all California working men and women by authorizing the enforcement of effective standards, assisting and encouraging employers to maintain safe and healthful working conditions, and by providing research, information, education, training, and enforcement in the field of occupational safety and health. 

Employers in the California porn industry are required to provide a safe and healthful workplace for employees, even pay the costs of a health and safety program, and yet this is not the standard in the adult industry. 

Currently, employers in the California pornography industry completely ignore the laws of the State of California to protect adult industry workers. This causes severe secondary negative effects on workers by subjecting them to physical and emotional abuse, major degradation and violence, illegal drugs, sexually transmitted diseases, and entrapment into prostitution. This is the standard of the California pornography industry. Any adult industry employer or worker who tells you differently is blatantly lying and does not value human life, but is rather destroying human life for the gluttonous love of money. 

Get More Facts About the Porn Industry and Its Impact on Consumers

The porn industry has a dark side for porn workers, but porn has some strong negative effects on consumers too. Learn more about the harms of porn and get the latest statistics on the porn industry in our free ebook Porn Stats.  

  1. Jason Whitney

    Everyone is blaming and criticizing the women in the porn industry, but no one is blaming the male consumers who are buying the porn videos and supporting the porn industry. Without oil your car will not run. Without the consumers the porn industry cannot operate. It takes two to tango. If you are watching porn videos and at the time putting down the porn actresses, then you are a hypocrits! Take a good look at yourself in the mirror before you point fingers at someone else.

  2. olivia

    I have written above, and have this to add. Yes these women have chosen to do porn, but often when young you cannot foresee the consequences of your decisions. I went into stripping for several reasons and enjoyed it for the 1st two years, but by the last 4 I felt stuck, had low self esteem and couldn’t easily get out. I am just trying to draw a parallel between stripping and sex work. I honestly don’t think any young woman chooses to do porn and think ” this is great, I’ll have sex with 10 men today, drink some semen or lick it off the floor and come home with a pocket full of cash. What a great life”. In reality in porn they cannot stick to vanilla (though they may initially think they can) because the nature of the industry is to push boundaries. What was exciting yesterday is boring today. They need fresh faces and the only way to stay in work is to do more and more extreme acts. Apparently ‘extreme’ is today’s hardcore. I am sure there is a small number of women who enjoy what they do but i think the percentage would be VERY low. Certain kinky sexual acts when done with people we are attracted to can be enjoyed but it’s very different when you do these things with people who don’t care about you and people who you are not attracted to but just happened to be cast with that day. Also, of course in theory they should get out and walk away at the first sign of trouble but that is not that easy when your mental health is not right. It took me a full 4 years to get out of dancing after 2 years of wanting to be there. It has to be said though that I and almost all other girls drank on shift to put make the acting easier. Drugs were also common. I would imagine it to be the same in the adult film industry. It’s a lifestyle and it’s not that easy to walk away. I don’t want anyone to feel sorry for me because I made decisions by myself but I would think the issues pornstars deal with are tenfold of what I dealt with. I honestly didn’t come accross many girls who didn’t have issues ranging from past sexual abuse, other abuse, absent fathers, addictions etc. I don’t regret dancing because it was at times fun but it’s fun like alcohol.. Superficial and damaging in the long run. I just hate the fact that men think it’s something those women enjoy. Seriously, have you not ever watched a porn flick and though WTF? What is that? And still got off on it and possibly felt guilty afterwards? I’ll wind up now by saying that I like the fact this issue is being talked about so that if someone wants to consider a career in the porn industry they have a bit more knowledge. Have some respect, these people help you get off how many times a week? You watch their movies, yet think of them as lazy sluts. 5 or more hours on a set in strange contorted positions is not lazy. The poles weren’t exactly easy either. And the constant chatting to men about stupid stuff drumming up business. Don’t feel sorry for me, don’t feel sorry for them but accept reality.

    • Marc Henry

      Excellent post. i’m really touched by your honesty and experiences. I have the same ambivalent attitude toward porn. as a former heavy user. and guilt about how every click helped fund the machine that made people millions yet exploited many others.

  3. Wow, some folks just have no sympathy or compassion for people. yes everyone one makes decisions and they must live with them. However young women and men are impressionable,some times desperate and gullible. Women fall into and yes are victim to preditory and unscrupulous producers ,pimps and pandering. please read here for my experience with pornography.http://gerilewis.wordpress.com/2011/10/10/the-continuing-tale-of-mary-the-brutality-and-dehuminization-of-pornography/

  4. a colvin

    Victim? Tell me about the gun that was put to your head every time you drank and doped your way through this life; tell me about how awful and guilty you felt going to the bank, spending the money you were earning. If you were victomised, how many times did you call the police? There should be a crapload of police reports on file, if you were being victimized. You made bad choices, didn’t want to own up to it, and so blame the industry (and others and other stuff — whoever and whatever they are –) for YOUR mistakes. I’m no porn-advocate, but porn, is a victimless crime. Like every other trade, its supply is in direct proportion to its demand. A better strategy would be to walk away, move on with your life and celebrate the change. It’s great that you walked away, but you were not in prison, nor forced into anything. The reality is, like most porn actors, you used your body to make cash. Period. You also knew it was VERY risky, but did it anyway. and if you didn’t you were braindead, which I doubt. You signed contracts, and performed a “service.” Morlalizing about it after the fact cannot mask that. All of us have walked on the dark side in moments of desperation. (including me.) But it takes determination (and a shitload of rationalizations) to stay in that life. You stayed. Now you’re not “there” any more. All you did was leave the business. At most that makes you an ex-hooker. So what? You want glory and fame? Do something glorious and become famous.

    • H8 porn

      Yh One can always assume and predict consequences of his/her decision but assuredly cant pre-determine the result of his/her indecissions. Porn industry has not been fair and is not in it dealings with both the actors and public. Am aware of how a decent loving member of my country was unknowingly abducted and forced into porn for days, however prostitution being one of the oldest professions on earth doesnt make it a lucrative and moral venture. The Entertainment industry must review laws on pornography before it corrupts the very few modest left. However, if u think God is non existing why think about him, but if you argue about faith and confuse miracle with coincidence and scientific interpretations then you aware He God does exist, i will therefore entreat you to study more about to clear your doubt than blaspheming and cursing his name thinking arrogrance and pride can save you. Who are you? What extraordinary achievement have you that is unheard of in the history of mankind? God is God and he reigns he needs not your consent nor approval to be. Grow up …… theres no such thing as being an atheist

  5. Steve Bell (my real name)

    WOW… after reading this all i can say is WOW. There are good women, and there are sluts.
    If all you think you have to offer the world is your sexuality then you get what you get. This is the USA. if you are from here then you have a choice. if you need money that bad then join the miatary. there is no other reason to
    be a escort, stripper, or porn star other than the fact that you chose to do so. me and other men well luv to watch
    you do what you do, but we will not feel bad. We did not push you there. You did that yourself. i will never call
    you a slut, but your life choice is yours. what comes from it is of your doing. this is the life you wanted
    because real work was too much for you. So what you get feom it is what you get.

    • hard worker

      Here here.

    • Dmitri Abdullai Mohammed Muhib

      You aren’t serious man

    • Michael

      Yellow Mr Steve… I felt like laughing when I read ur comment.. Yeah it’s true…. Out there people will like to watch u do what u re doing… Nd ur choice is made by u … The actor… Can’t call any one a slut…. Cus we all got side leaks in our business

  6. Jacki

    It is also one-sided, don’t paint us all with one brush. Many of us have done porn and are not harmed, it depends on your mindset when you go into it. Also many of the “amateur” studios the actors are not all pulled from that city you mentioned. We shoot in other states and also other parts of Cali.

  7. ok only one thing she choose that life style nobody forces nobody to joint porn

  8. labelle

    Grow a spine, ladies. I am an escort and I would never do porn bc its unprotected but I love what I do, I make great money, I don’t feel “degraded” whatever that means. Think about it, if a man is an escort would he complain about being “used”? Heck no! I am an independent liberated woman who enjoys life. Degraded are the needy, silly wives that think their husband would never cheat. But hey if you want to be poor and whiny and your self worth depends on a mans love then to each his own. Tata;)

    • Ian Sawyer

      Is Labelle your real name?
      I guess that the end justifies the means for you. You earn big money in the industry but for how long?
      The author of the article knows the porn industry inside out. After all, she was part of the whole sordid business (as a prostitute and in movies) from a very early age.

      maybe you should look a little harder at the dangers of the job.

    • Arnold

      Hahaha Labelle I see why you are an escort. It’s evident in your lines. The truth is everyone somehow manages to find a reason as to why they do the things they do. But when it starts becoming a ‘defense’ for what I do, i smell a rat. Sure when you were younger if someone asked you; what do you want to become? it wouldn’t be an escort. Well this is because I have been in a classroom too and such a question have been asked. Remember the voice of the people is the voice of the god. Most people think being an escort, pornstar are all degrading, so you r in the few who think otherwise. Keep it up Labelle, we will see your fate after this life!!!

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