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We use the "Restricted To Adults" (RTA) website label to better enable parental filtering. Protect your children from adult content and block access to this site by using parental controls. PARENTS, PLEASE BE ADVISED: If you are a parent, it is your responsibility to keep any age-restricted content from being displayed to your children or wards. Furthermore, you represent and warrant that you will not allow any minor access to this site or services. This website should only be accessed if you are at least 18 years old or of legal age to view such material in your local jurisdiction, whichever is greater. The only thing I can say is that it's a clean man that's willing to do dirty things.You are about to enter a website that contains explicit material (pornography). You have to have that it.Ī: Can't explain it. Out of 1,000, one is lucky to have what it takes to be Falcon man. In the interview, we see if we like each other, take some naked pictures, maybe we'll shoot a quick video. Q: Where do models come from? What's the audition process like?Ī: We get over 1,000 e-mails a week, with pictures. Anyone who chooses to be in front of the camera as a model or an actor does it because it's giving them something, they can be someone else. There's no difference between the adult industry and mainstream Hollywood. Q: Is therapy part of the model benefits package?Ī: No. You have to be able to perform in a cold room. If you're gonna be choosing this business, you usually don't have a problem with that. If there's no chemistry, we use movies or magazines, or the mind. On a Falcon set, we have the models fluff each other.
But it doesn't really exist in the gay industry. We give them energy bars.Ī: Someone who assists in getting a model an erection. Models have to work four to five hours for one scene. They have to come to San Francisco, get naked, have sex in front of a camera, under lights and in front of a crew. We treat our models with complete respect. It's pretty easy to get through.Ī: There's no fat man smoking a cigar in this office. Q: Has anyone ever refused someone they saw on the set?Ī: No. Our job, simply, is to make a safe environment for the two men - or however many men are in the scene - and let them enjoy having sex together. Anytime you get a lot of queens together in one room, it can be dramatic. We bond and create a family relationship. They can make $500- $5,000 go-go dancing at a club on a Saturday night.Ī: Matthew Rush, Josh Weston and Tom Chase.Ī: A lot of fun. But they also make money with appearances. We have over 300 titles, and we've worked with more than 2,500 models over the years. (Bulging pause.) Do they make royalties on films?Ī: No. It's what that person looks like, attitude, their sexual charisma. Most of our expenses are model fees.Ī: Six hundred to $3,000 for a day. But since we don't openly live and experience our sexual fantasies, it's perceived as a dark side - it's not something we see in daylight.
Q: Do you ever run out of ideas, themes, story lines?Ī: Everyone's got sex in mind, fantasies, a dark side. Falcon is and has been an integral part of gay history.Īnd, face it, sex is a part of our lifestyle. Q: Your company received criticism from some members of the community who saw it (as being) immoral that porn money helped build The Center.Ī: All the gay people who spent their hard-earned money on entertainment saw it go right back into The Center that's helping them be OK with themselves and their sexuality. We don't do anything that would induce unsafe sex, drug use or even cigarette smoking. Thriller, detective, witchcraft and, certainly, lots and lots of "quality" sex.Ī: Falcon sex is the cream of the crop and it's done with morals. Just back from editing a big-budget, 90-minute feature called "Deep South: The Big and the Easy," Rutherford explained - as we began our chat in his slick office - that the film was shot in New Orleans and is a weave of voodoo, In addition, after all the company's bills are paid, Falcon profits go to the foundation and get distributed to nonprofits such as the Positive Resource Center the Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network and the U.S. Holmes Foundation donated $1 million dollars to the new San Francisco Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transgender Community Center.