Recounts the author's experiences as an Ivy League college graduate turned successful pornographic film producer.A thoughtful, hilarious, and compulsively readable memoir by an Ivy League graduate-turned-pornographer who sets out to bring sophistication and equality to sexual cinema—only to find that he can't change porn, but porn can certainly change him.American Gangbang heralds the arrival of a profound and gifted new voice in narrative nonfiction. In 1999, after four years of studying at Brown University, Sam Benjamin heads to California in a twenty-year-old Volvo, dead set on turning himself into an artist, despite his complete lack of talent. There, stoned, he has an epiphany—he will make progressive porn. And so begins his turbulent journey. . . .In whip-smart, lyrical prose, Benjamin traces his three-year immersion into the world of Hollywood's bleak, screen glow–lit doppelganger: the southern California sex industry. His rapid ascent from the dingy storefront rental of a starving artist to the multimillion-dollar Malibu villa of a full-fledged porn producer confronts him with the uncomfortably alluring realities of America's strangest industry: gun-toting actors, high on terrible, drug-induced potency; giggling actresses battling internal demons in wobbly heels and pink fishnets; the insatiable consumer demands to sink ever lower, more exploitative, nastier. The result is the titillating, dramatic chronicle of a young man who invites the deepest, most troubling parts of himself to rise to the surface in order to get a good look at them—only to find that what he sees makes his world seem suddenly very small.A provocative, universal coming-of-age story, American Gangbang explores with unflinching honesty the darkly rich junction of sex and self-discovery.
Документальная литература / Порно / Современные любовные романы / Эротическая литература / Роман, повесть18+Sam Benjamin
American Gangbang: A Love Story
“One of the sexiest books of the year.”
—San Francisco Bay Guardian
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For my family, who stood by me loyally — no matter what
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ONE
Once upon a time, I was twenty-two and fresh out of college, with a heart young and open and free, and I had but one dream: to move to California.
My father seemed rather unwilling to grasp this concept. “Are we really that bad? You can’t even consider staying on the east coast?”
“David, calm down.” My mom nodded at me apologetically. “He really doesn’t mind the idea so much.”
“I don’t like New York,” I said. “In fact, I hate New York. I can’t even stand to be there for two days. You know that.”
“I have never met anyone who honestly hates New York. It just doesn’t happen very often. Quite likely you are the only Jewish person in the whole world who hates New York.”
It was hard to win an argument with my dad—being a psychoanalyst, he did this kind of thing for a living—but in this case, I didn’t have to win. All I had to do was leave. So I did. I took my graduation money and I bought a 1980 diesel Volvo,vind I drove it to California. To a place called Santa Cruz.
A funky ad tacked up on a health food store bulletin board led me straight to a two-man bungalow on the east side of town, inhabited by a forty-year-old vegan named Periwinkle. He was a spiritual gardener hailing from Berkeley, California, with an enormous experimental music collection, impeccable aesthetic taste, and a passion for social justice. He also had about twelve cents in the bank. Periwinkle refused to buy any new articles of clothing, a policy that extended to underwear.
“You can find great underwear at the Salvation Army,” he scoffed. “There are too many wonderful pairs of underwear out there in the world today to justify spending seven dollars on new ones.”
Periwinkle was forever out in the front yard, laboring with grand enthusiasm and perfectionist fervor on his small, beautiful garden, when he really should have been working at someone else’s place, for money.
“I don’t care, Sam, that’s the thing,” he explained to me. “I’m so happy gardening—so much happier than I used to be. Do you know what I used to do?”
“No,” I said. “What?”
“I used to be a traveling salesman'. I’m dead serious. I’d go from town to town, selling life insurance policies for some company that I’d never even visited, making tons of money, flushing it all down the drain. It’s incredible — incredible that it took me so long to wake up. Incredible that I finally did wake up.”
One evening, Periwinkle and I rocked back and forth in a salvaged chair on our tiny front porch, listening to the Pacific Ocean. “Tell me, Sam,” Periwinkle said, “what really motivates you?”
“Ah ...” I hesitated, hoping to come up with an answer that would suitably impress my new friend. “Civil libertarianism?”
“I would have guessed girls,” Periwinkle said, smiling.
“Well, that’s probably a little closer to the truth,” I admitted.
“Art’s really my bag, though.”
“Art!” Periwinkle said, approvingly. “How’d you get into that?”
“College. It was my major.”
“Very cool. What’s your medium?”
“Well, I used to be into comics. But I was pretty terrible at drawing, as it turned out. So then I tried writing short stories. But that got boring. It was like, just me and my computer, you know?”
“Sure,” Periwinkle said, taking on his bowl. Like most other Cruzians, Periwinkle had a real fondness for marijuana, but the difference was, he smoked leaf. No buds: just leaf. An eighth of chopped marijuana leaf went for around ten bucks in those days. He was dirt poor, Periwinkle, but he really loved to smoke. All the time.
“And now?”
“Well, now, nothing, I guess. I’m still trying to figure out what I’m good at.”
“You know what I like?” Peri said, the weed sparking his enthusiasm. “You know what I think is art? Cable access. That stuff is brilliant! We had a station in Berkeley when I was growing up.”
“Well, sure, cable access is cool.”
“Do you want to start your own show, then?” Periwinkle asked, hopefully. “Santa Cruz could use a really smart, strange cable access show.”
“I don’t know. I don’t think I would make much money at it.”
“Of course you wouldn’t,” Periwinkle said, eyeing me distrustfully. “No one makes money from cable access television.”
“Well, I don’t know.”
“Consider it. Follow your passion.” He bit off the last word with surprising spitefulness, as if he’d spent a regrettably long stretch of his own life doing just the opposite.
The truth is, I wanted to be an artist. I wanted sit bad. Precisely how I was to accomplish this was unclear, since I was not proficient at drawing, painting, sculpting, or any other artistic pursuit; nonetheless, art is what I had my sights set on. Thank God for postmodernism.