Dusk!

Dusk! is a monthly subscription adult film television channel and website dedicated to "porn for women".[1] Based in the Netherlands, Dusk! is available on all Dutch cable operators (including Ziggo, UPC Netherlands, CAIW and KPN), 15 other European countries and the United States.[2] The channel broadcasts 24/7[3] and is owned by 2GrapesMedia.[1]

Dusk!
CountryNetherlands
Broadcast areaNational
Ownership
Owner2GrapesMedia
History
LaunchedApril 2009
Links
Websitewww.dusk-tv.com

History

Dusk! was founded in 2008[1] by Martijn Broersma with the aim of building an erotic TV channel based on the sexual preferences of women.[4][3] When it was launched in the Netherlands in 2009, Dusk! was the first adult TV channel in the world aimed at a female audience.[2] In 2011, the channel was reportedly available to 1.2 million viewers.[4] By January 2015, it had undergone significant growth: all Dutch cable operators offered Dusk! in their erotic package, and 15 other European countries and the United States offered it via video on demand.[2]

The supply of female-oriented adult films – variously known as "porn for women", women's pornography, women's erotica, or porna according to Dusk! – has been increasing since the rise of feminist pornography in the 1980s, and has become increasingly accepted since.[2] With rising success in the 2010s, Dusk! played a significant role in helping many (potential) female porn consumers find what they like according to their own fantasies and needs, which many of them had not found in mainstream porn, which usually only focuses on men's sexual pleasure.[2][5]

Content

Selection process

A panel consistsing of roughly 2000 women (as of January 2015) together decide which films and videos are broadcast according to what they consider to be porna.[2] This selection process goes as follows:

  1. Any woman can apply to join the panel.[6] Panelists can watch the videos for selection for free.[1]
  2. The women in the panel regularly view fragments from all kinds of adult films including both hard-core mainstream films and films made from a female point of view.[6]
  3. After watching a fragment, the women are asked to fill out a survey, rating and reviewing the fragment. Rating comes in three degrees of "spicy": one pepper for "it turned me on a bit", two peppers for "spicy enough", and three peppers for "super hot". In the review, panelists write what they did and didn't like about the clips, and whether or not they considered it porna or 'just ordinary porn'.[6]
  4. Before Dusk! reaches a conclusion about a film, it has to have been viewed and rated a hundred times.[6]
  5. Content rejected by the panel is not broadcast. According to Yvette Luhrs, Dusk! programme manager in 2015, this means that certain niches such as hard sadomasochism are excluded because most women in the panel reject it.[2]

Result: porna

The material that makes it through the selection process is dubbed porna (to distinguish it from 'traditional porn'[7][3]), and is broadcast.[2] This term, popularised by Dusk! to the extent that it has become a household term in feminist pornography,[6][8] approximately means 'pornography that women really enjoy,'[2][6] based on 'intimacy' with a 'clear context',[2] and which is 'realistic, explicit, with 'real' people and a well-balanced development of sexual desire, made with respect.'[6] Broersma and American erotic filmmaker Jennifer Lyon Bell said that porna puts sex 'into a storyline' in which the actors and especially the actresses 'put their hearts into' instead of looking absent-minded.[3] Dusk! employee Xaviera Wong A Soy stated in 2016 that 'this doesn't mean that there is only cuddling and long talks', but that porna can also be rough and in your face, with dominant men or women, and few words.[5] Dusk! net manager Nadine Meanwell said that extra attention is paid to women achieving orgasms (often absent, unclear or faked in mainstream porn), and showing the entire body of a man instead of just his penis (a turnoff for many women watching mainstream porn).[5]

Some critics including former employee Yvette Luhrs have claimed that the selection process filters out a lot of niches of female sexuality, such as hard sadomasochism and more 'mainstream' porn that some women do enjoy. Dusk! thus excludes minority preferences amongst women and its porna is therefore appealing to most, but not all female viewers.[2][9]

Directors and films

The TV channel schedules films by female porn directors including Candida Royalle,[3][6] Petra Joy,[4][6] Erika Lust,[4][6] Anna Span,[4][6] Tristan Taormino,[6] Émilie Jouvet,[6] and Maria Beatty.[6] Some of these directors make feminist pornography or pornography targeted at a female audience,[4][3] while others cater to couples.[3]

The channel also broadcasts short films by Swedish filmmaker Mia Engberg, who, along with twelve other directors, produced a collection of feminist pornographic short films entitled Dirty Diaries.[6]

References

  1. "About DUSK". dusk-tv.com. 2GrapesMedia. 2008. Retrieved 15 February 2021.
  2. Adinda Akkermans & Marieke de Ruiter (7 January 2015). "Porno met een verhaal? Dat kan best". NRC Handelsblad (in Dutch). Retrieved 15 February 2021.
  3. Paul Ames (10 February 2011). "A porn channel for women blossoms". GlobalPost. Retrieved 15 February 2021.
  4. Catalina May (22 March 2011). "Porn made for women, by women". The Guardian. Retrieved 15 February 2021.
  5. Maxime Smit (7 August 2016). "Porno voor vrouwen: geloofwaardig en expliciet, maar geen knuffelseks". Het Parool (in Dutch). Retrieved 15 February 2021.
  6. Kate l. Gould (24 January 2013). "Vive la Révolution! The Superheroines of Porn Domination". The Huffington Post. Retrieved 15 February 2021.
  7. Paul Ames (10 February 2011). "Porn Channel For Dutch Women Explodes In Netherlands". The Huffington Post. Retrieved 15 February 2021.
  8. Rachel Kramer Bussel (13 April 2013). "Organic, Fair-Trade Porn: On the Hunt for Ethical Smut". The Daily Beast. Retrieved 15 February 2021.
  9. Eline Van Lancker (12 December 2018). "Is porna écht wat vrouwen opwindend vinden?". De Morgen (in Dutch). Retrieved 15 February 2021.
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