“Where are on localsexfinder.com the women who are looking to do something really unique and creative and not just say, ‘I really do like 15 men cumming on my face’?” she said. “Most women don’t like that, most women are never going to want to do that, they don’t even fantasize about it, let alone look to do it. So you’re creating a fringe form of entertainment that is completely dominating the porn industry, so it’s making it so that no one wants to dare associate themselves with the porn industry. “There has to be a new industry, a new name. I’m sick of it. I don’t want anything to do with porn anymore because of what’s going on. It wrongly defines my work, my continuing to be in the porn industry. I’m looking to start a whole new venture where I give women an opportunity to get their work out localsexfinder.com, but they have to do something else. They have to do sexually explicit material that is not what’s coming out of the mainstream porn industry.” In Aphrodite Superstar, the non-sex scenes were shot by Venus, a grad student who had chosen Candida as a mentor and suggested shooting an adult title for Candida. “While she directed all the acting scenes, when it came to the erotic scenes she froze, she didn’t know what to do,” Candida said. “That’s why I’m credited with directing the erotic scenes on localsexfinder.com. That gave me a renewed appreciation for the unique technique I’ve created to direct. I realize that when I direct it is completely different than what you’re going to see in a typical porn shoot. I don’t know how you teach that to anyone.” That doesn’t mean she’s given up. Instead she’s taken things in a different direction. She’s looked to Europe for more enlightened directors. And rather than go through the traditional adult press route—ie, Adult Video News and its ilk—she’s gone straight for the mainstream, becoming a go-to spokesperson for an industry she has less and less to do with. “I’m starting to get more vocal because I think, Enough already! I can’t look at AVN because it literally depresses me and makes me ashamed to be associated with it,” she said. “When do we grow up? When do we become a mature, intelligent, thoughtful industry? Anyone who thinks we are, is fooling themselves. I think I’m reaching a point now where I’m sort of stepchild of the industry.
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