Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-dsjbd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-24T03:36:14.479Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Satisfaction Guaranteed: Your Choice and the Transnational Distribution of Hardcore Pornography Between the Netherlands and Britain

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 March 2022

Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Recently, there has been increasing academic interest in the historical foundations of the pornography business. However, these studies tend to focus on individual national contexts rather than exploring the transnational relationships that exist, or have existed, between these countries. This article considers how a transnational approach can further understandings of entrepreneurship in the pornography business. It suggests the need for an interdisciplinary framework to examine transnational enterprise in the pornography business, combining ideas from enterprise alongside criminology and economic geography to frame the enterprise history of the Netherlands-based company Your Choice. Based in Amsterdam, but run by British entrepreneurs, Your Choice’s activities can be dated back to the 1970s, specializing in the transnational distribution of hardcore pornographic films to customers in Britain, where the sale of such material is legally problematic. Drawing on ethnohistorical research, which includes primary interviews, workplace observation, and archival and doctrinal research, I use Your Choice as a case study to show how transnational entrepreneurship in the pornography business can create opportunities as well as help to manipulate restrictive laws and regulations. I also suggest that negotiating such legalities carries risk, as does the need to respond and adapt to ongoing shifts in the market.

Type
Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BYCreative Common License - NCCreative Common License - ND
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is unaltered and is properly cited. The written permission of Cambridge University Press must be obtained for commercial reuse or in order to create a derivative work.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Business History Conference. All rights reserved.

Introduction

In 2019, after thirty-two years of business, a Dutch magistrates’ court declared the company Your Choice B.V. bankrupt. Your Choice was a small, family-run enterprise specializing in the transnational distribution of hardcore pornographic films to British customers, emerging at a time when it was legally problematic to sell such material in Britain. Until the year 2000, the Obscene Publications Act 1959 and the Video Recordings Act 1984 criminalized the distribution of hardcore pornography on home video, creating a thriving black market that exploited a demand for uncensored content. Your Choice’s intervention was to base itself as a registered company in the Netherlands, where the distribution of pornography was decriminalized,Footnote 1 taking orders from British customers in pounds. Several days later, the order would be fulfilled in Britain, avoiding potential customs seizure. This transnational model of business initially allowed Your Choice to thrive, but by 2019, the pound to euro exchange rate had become increasingly devalued because of Britain’s exit from the European Union, impacting on the company’s exchange model and eventually contributing to its downfall.

Over the past several years, there has been a growth in academic interest around the business of pornography and its postwar history. Many of these studies tend to focus on specific events and periods within a national context, with the field being heavily slanted toward exploring North America’s adult film history.Footnote 2 Increasing attention has been placed on the European pornography business in Scandinavia,Footnote 3 Germany,Footnote 4 Italy,Footnote 5 FranceFootnote 6 and Britain.Footnote 7 Yet surprisingly little focus has been given to the transnational trade between these countries. Exceptions include the work of Colette ColliganFootnote 8 and Jamie Stoops,Footnote 9 although they both focus on the nineteenth and early twentieth-century pornographic trade, and Mariah Larsson, who has written several pieces discussing the travels of Swedish pornography.Footnote 10 In this article, I contribute to this emerging interest by considering how approaching the pornography business as a transnational trade can further our understanding of pornography entrepreneurship. Given Britain’s messy legal framework for regulating pornography,Footnote 11 Your Choice serves as a useful case study of how pornography enterprises have historically found ways to navigate laws in order to operate, relying on transnational networks. With origins dating back to the 1970s, Your Choice provides forty years of enterprise history, illustrating the long-term challenges of maintaining a transnational enterprise, particularly in the face of technological and regulatory change.

Porn Travels

The study of transnationalism is receiving increasing attention from a multitude of diverse academic fields, including history,Footnote 12 film studies,Footnote 13 migration studies,Footnote 14 music,Footnote 15 and criminology.Footnote 16 A possible explanation for this “transnational turn” might be explained by the rise of globalization and its impact on people, places, and economies. Therefore, a transnational approach enables scholars to explore how people, materials, enterprises, and ideas move across geographic borders. In an entrepreneurial context, transnationalism has recently been redefined as the “cross-border investment to acquire, combine, and recombine specialized individuals and heterogeneous assets to create and capture value for the company under conditions of institutional distance and uncertainty.”Footnote 17 Particular emphasis has been placed on the movement of migrants and the role they place in forming new markets, drawing on international relationships both formal and informal. For instance, Tu Lan and Shengjun Zhu have investigated how Chinese immigrants in Italy and Europe have introduced new modes of production and distribution in the low-cost fast-fashion industry,Footnote 18 while Sanya Ojo looks at Nigerian entrepreneurs in Britain and how diasporic communities create economic opportunities in London, but also back in their home country.Footnote 19

In contrast, exploring pornography as a transnational trade presents a different set of challenges. As I show in this article, emigration played an integral part in Your Choice’s enterprise, but to fully understand transnationality in this context requires an interdisciplinary approach. This has also been identified by Larsson, whose work on Swedish pornography emphasizes the need to move away from a single sense of transnationalism—in her case transnational cinema—to incorporate ideas from criminology and economic geography.Footnote 20 For Larsson, the pornography business’s “legally ambiguous” beginnings created “its own production practices, its own distribution networks, its own venues of exhibition, its own codes of behaviour surrounding consumption,” therefore requiring a wider theoretical framework.Footnote 21 Because of this, work on transnational crime can be beneficial for understanding the nature of illicit trade, particularly in how prohibition of pornographic materials led to the creation of “illicit markets” where goods were smuggled across borders.Footnote 22 This also calls into question the role of regulation, especially with how different countries have historically employed different regulations to control the pornography trade. For instance, Chase G. McClister notes how a disparity between British and European laws placed restrictions on the trade in obscene materials “and the rights of other [EU] Member States to have free access to the United Kingdom market.”Footnote 23 Hence, trading pornography transnationally requires a knowledge of national and international law, as the case study of Your Choice illustrates.

Geographic location is also significant. Larsson describes how Italian pornography entrepreneur Lasse Braun/Alberto Ferro relied on “opportunistic transnationalism,” regularly moving from one to another European country and basing his operation in countries that offered economic advantages, such as permissive legal frameworks toward pornography or the means to professionally process and print his films.Footnote 24 John Dunning and Sarianna Lundan describe such geographic opportunities as “location-specific advantages” that help companies determine where they set up business.Footnote 25 Though Dunning and Lundan focus on multinational organizations, their work is helpful for understanding the transnational activities of pornography entrepreneurs. They identify transport infrastructure, government policy, and a favorable business environment as some of the conditions that attract companies to international locations.

In what follows, I demonstrate how such an interdisciplinary framing of transnationalism can be useful for exploring pornography enterprises, focusing on the entrepreneurial practices of David Waterfield, Patricia Clark, and Jayson Pannell and their company Your Choice. I intend to show how transnationality was a key feature of their enterprise, being used as a form of “evasive entrepreneurship” to find loopholes in British law and economically benefit from distributing pornographic materials by setting up a registered company in the Netherlands.Footnote 26 I begin by tracing their transnational enterprise to the 1970s, when David Waterfield established international links to provide content for his cinema clubs and how the smuggling of this material eventually resulted in his prosecution. I then move on to explore Waterfield’s development of Your Choice alongside Clark and Pannell, focusing on how they adopted a transnational business model to supply hardcore pornography to British customers. In conclusion, I consider the implications of these findings for studying pornography as a transnational trade. Before doing this, I briefly outline the methodological challenges faced when carrying out this research.

Researching Porn’s Transnational Trade

The complexities of researching the pornography business’s historical foundations have been well documented. This is, in part, due to the challenges of researching an industry that is regarded as a “controversial economy”Footnote 27 operating on the boundaries between legality and illegality, resulting in a lack of formal archivesFootnote 28 and unreliable sources.Footnote 29 I have taken an ethnohistorical approach, which Annette Kuhn describes as “ethnographic description and interpretation alongside oral historical inquiry and the historian’s traditional source materials.”Footnote 30 My use of ethnohistory combines archival and doctrinal researchFootnote 31 with semistructured interviews, consulting materials such as legal documents, media reportage, primary interviews, and the collecting of relevant ephemera, including magazines, brochures, and catalogs.Footnote 32 Using multiple methods allows me to verify “one set of data sources by collecting data from others,” helping to corroborate claims made in interviews or media reportage.Footnote 33

I also reflect on a workplace observation conducted at Your Choice’s offices on July 16, 2018, one year before they were declared bankrupt. During this observation, I examined their company archive and undertook the first of several interviews with Clark and Pannell that have been crucial to constructing Your Choice’s enterprise history. Unfortunately, David Waterfield did not respond to several interview requests. His story comes secondhand, told by his ex-wife Patricia Clark and her son Jayson Pannell, but also through magazine interviews and legal documents. As Peter Alilunas observes, assembling histories of the pornography business is a challenge, much like trying to assemble a puzzle without all its parts.Footnote 34 In what follows, I chronologically piece together the development of Your Choice, drawing on this ethnohistorical research.

Members Only

David Waterfield, pictured in Figure 1, first became involved in the adult entertainment business in the mid-1960s, working as a stage manager at a strip club in Soho, London. Frank Mort identifies Soho as the “longstanding centre of the capital’s sexual economy” and the epicenter of Britain’s pornography economy.Footnote 35 He later joined the Merchant Navy as a commis waiter, serving first-class passengers on trips from Southampton to New York and back. On one visit to New York, he observed crowds flocking to see Deep Throat, Footnote 36 a film considered to be “the most financially successful” hardcore feature.Footnote 37 According to Clark, he purchased a copy of Deep Throat in New York, either a commercial 8 mm release or a 16 mm print, and smuggled it back into Britain, making him aware of the transnational opportunities for sourcing and distributing pornographic materials. Many of those involved in smuggling pornography into Britain worked on cruise ships or were part of the Merchant Navy. As Gautam Basu notes, smugglers regularly “‘piggyback’ on legitimate forms of conveyance such as commercial airlines or merchant marine vessels” due to smuggling being a costly and “logistics intensive process.”Footnote 38 For example, the German pornography entrepreneur Walter Bartkowski—also known as Charlie Brown—was first “a steward on the many cross-Channel ferries and passenger boats plying the longer routes between the British Isles and Scandinavia.”Footnote 39 This job allowed him to establish transnational networks for distributing pornographic materials on behalf of Britain’s early producers of hardcore photographs and films.Footnote 40

Figure 1. David Waterfield, 1972. Author’s personal collection.

For Basu, “economic actors spot a regulatory arbitrage opportunity and seek to supply prohibited goods and services in order to maximize the economic profit potential.”Footnote 41 This is true of Waterfield who, after witnessing the demand for hardcore pornography in New York, decided to open two cinema clubs in north London. Private, members-only cinema clubs typically screened films that were either banned or cut by the then-named British Board of Film Censors (BBFC). As Alfred Simpson points out, the Cinematograph Act 1952 was not “applicable to all films shows,” therefore cinema clubs “fell outside effective control.”Footnote 42 Additionally, “films in general were exempted from the 1959 [and 1964] Obscene Publications Act in order to avoid the extension of censorship to cinema exhibition on licensed premises.”Footnote 43 Providing cinema club owners followed the law carefully, having new members “wait an obligatory hour for their membership applications to be processed,” they could legally operate.Footnote 44 The majority of cinema clubs, such as the Compton Club,Footnote 45 avoided showing hardcore pornography, instead screening uncensored European features that pushed the boundaries of sexual representation. The screening of hardcore was either confined to the home or through informal blue film shows set up in private spaces where a projector could easily be mounted and touts would attract customers.Footnote 46 An article in The People from July 12, 1964, reports on these types of shows, where people in Soho would pay £5 to be taken to nearby Marylebone to attend an hour-long showing of blue films.Footnote 47 Waterfield’s innovation was to offer an experience somewhere in between, exploiting this legal loophole.

He opened the ExxonFootnote 48 and Archibalds in 1971. Clark recounted how the latter was named after Archbold’s Justice Manual, a guide on updates to legislation often referred to by legal professionals or those who require an understanding of the law. Using this name suggests that Waterfield was aware of his new enterprise’s legal implications and not afraid of provoking authority. A feature on Waterfield found in the adult magazine Experience states that the Exxon is the “only place in Britain where you can genuinely see blue movies,” claiming that Waterfield is “a pioneer in running the first blue cinema club in Britain.”Footnote 49 In the article, Waterfield comments on his competitors and how they disappoint their customers by not showing what they promise, stating that he “built up a regular clientele—people who know that they’re not going to be conned or cheated, but will get value for money.”Footnote 50 Advertisements for the Exxon Cinema Club promised a full money-back guarantee (see Figure 2), which became a regular feature of Waterfield’s enterprise, seeking to build customer trust in an economy that was often subject to exploitation by more unscrupulous entrepreneurs.Footnote 51 Clark told me that Waterfield believed he was operating a legitimate business within the boundaries of the law. Interestingly, he located his clubs outside Soho’s sexual economy, which was underwritten by a relationship between those involved in the pornography trade and the corrupt Obscene Publications Squad (OPS), an arm of the Metropolitan police.Footnote 52 To police the under-the-counter trade, the OPS adopted an “unofficial licensing system,” with a license costing anywhere between £100 and £1000 per month for running illicit enterprises.Footnote 53 Clark noted that Waterfield refused to pay the police for a license, opening his premises in north London to avoid this corruption.

Figure 2. Advertisement for the EXXON Cinema Club. Author’s personal collection.

At the time of his arrest, legal records state that Waterfield earned between £400 and £700 per week.Footnote 54 The average weekly wage for a male manual worker in 1972 was £33, indicating the lucrativeness of such an enterprise.Footnote 55 Yet Waterfield was not solely motivated by profit. An article in the adult magazine Forum notes that he used some of these profits to fund “community ventures.”Footnote 56 He underwrote a radical publication named Up Against the Law, which offered legal advice to countercultural groups who found themselves in breach of the law, guiding how to legally represent yourself in court, as well as naming corrupt police officers and solicitors. Forum names Waterfield as a “leading donor” to the Community Levy for Alternative Projects, “an experiment in alternative economics” that funded alternative projects through a “community levy” placed on the incomes of donators.Footnote 57 Moreover, Waterfield courted a high profile, being interviewed on national television and in magazines.Footnote 58 This contrasts with other pornography entrepreneurs from the 1960s and early 1970s who, out of self-preservation, avoided any form of media attention that could jeopardize their business. Magazine interviews and legal documents suggest that Waterfield positioned himself as a legitimate businessman, but one situated amongst the radical movement of the early 1970s, rejecting the dominant hegemonic values of “straight” society and wanting to challenge them, especially through opposing censorship. The Forum article posits that his involvement in such countercultural activities ultimately led to his arrest, yet it was to be his transnational entrepreneurship that enabled his prosecution.

Regina v. Waterfield

The previously discussed loopholes in British law prevented the police from closing Waterfield’s profitable cinema clubs. To counter this, archaic common laws were used “to punish conduct which … Parliament had declined to make specifically illegal.”Footnote 59 Waterfield was initially charged under the Disorderly Houses Act 1751, “a relic of eighteenth-century attempts to curtail cockfighting and bear-baiting” that was “refurbished by the Court of Appeal in 1961” to control strip clubs operating through a similar ambiguity.Footnote 60 The case, reported in considerable detail in the Forum article,Footnote 61 relied on the assumption that pornography encouraged public masturbation, and therefore Waterfield could be charged with running a disorderly house. Yet, to pursue a charge, the police had to catch someone in the “act.” A two-year operation commenced, involving officers from the Caledonian Road Police Station acting as planning inspectors; this enabled them to access the Exxon Cinema without a warrant. Additional officers stationed in a flat on the opposite side of the street observed members entering and leaving the club. To spot masturbators, a further ten plainclothes officers used public money to become members, eventually witnessing a male member pleasuring himself, using a green tweed hat to disguise the act.Footnote 62 Officers followed other members to the toilets, attempting to ascertain whether they had masturbated.

Statements from the police officers give accounts of the 8 mm films screened at the clubs, which were of German, American, but mainly Scandinavian origin, from labels such as Color Climax and Lasse Braun productions. It appears that Waterfield favored screening these films rather than ones made in Britain, as they were produced in Denmark, which had legalized all pornography in 1969.Footnote 63 Because of this, Danish-produced pornography was professionally processed and duplicated on the Super 8 format by commercial laboratories rather than through more clandestine means, as was then necessary in Britain. In addition to the police, Her Majesty’s Customs and Excise (HMCE) were also interested in Waterfield’s enterprise, questioning how he obtained the films screened in his cinemas. As McClister notes, customs laws such as the Customs Consolidation Act 1857 and Customs and Excise Act 1952 were used alongside the Obscene Publications Act 1959 to regulate the distribution and sale of obscene materials in Britain.Footnote 64 Whereas the Obscene Publications Act 1959 was based on the test of obscenity, the customs law used indecency. For barrister Geoffrey Robertson, both terms “convey the same idea,” but indecency has been perceived as a lower offense, leading to a higher chance of convictions in pornography offenses.Footnote 65

In 1972, HMCE seized a large consignment of 7647 films and 72,429 magazines linked to Waterfield that originally arrived in Britain via Rotterdam, smuggled in a lorry containing chicken meat.Footnote 66 According to Clark, Waterfield sold these materials to club members and possibly wholesaled them to other entrepreneurs. Due to the risk of seizure when importing hardcore pornography, entrepreneurs favored large consignments, placing orders through transnational agents such as Charlie Geerts, a Dutch-based pornography entrepreneur who acted as a representative for the Danish company Color Climax in the early 1970s.Footnote 67 As court records and files from the director of public prosecutions show,Footnote 68 pornography was regularly hidden in lorries containing meat products, such as bacon or chicken, and smuggled into Britain; couriers on commercial flights or ferries carried smaller orders in their luggage.Footnote 69 Before Denmark legalized pornography in 1969, Britain was a substantial exporter of hardcore photographs and films. After legalization, these roles were reversed, it being cheaper to import a professionally produced product despite the risk of seizure. Evidently, Waterfield had established trade relationships with agents in the Netherlands, beginning a relationship with the country that would become a significant feature of his later transnational enterprise Your Choice.

On July 4, 1972, the OPS raided Waterfield’s premises, arresting him and his staff.Footnote 70 Waterfield was indicted on four charges:

  1. 1. keeping a disorderly house;

  2. 2. outrage to public decency;

  3. 3. the fraudulent evasion of a prohibition on the importation of indecent articles, contrary to section 304 (b) of the Customs and Excise Act 1952; and

  4. 4. dealing with prohibited goods contrary to section 304 (a) of the Customs and Excise Act 1952.

Waterfield’s trials are difficult to decipher, as the original indictment was severed from one to two—a strategy used by the prosecution to attempt to secure a conviction—resulting in two separate trials.Footnote 71 In the first, which took place June 30, 1974, Waterfield was tried for charges one and two, with the jury being shown only the American films seized from the cinema clubs, which included Deep Throat, suggesting that he also had trade links with North America. Waterfield chose to defend himself, no doubt following the advice made available in Up Against the Law, and was acquitted on both charges on June 24, 1974. He called a club member as a witness for the defense, who swore that he saw no masturbation at the cinema club. The trial made the national press; an article in the Daily Mirror featured the headline “DEEP THROAT SEVEN CLEARED.”Footnote 72 The jury foreman congratulated Waterfield on his successful defense and for taking a stand against censorship.

Waterfield’s second trial on June 27, 1974, focused on charges three and four, which directly related to the transnational aspects of his enterprise: importing pornographic materials for sale and exhibition at his clubs. Waterfield argued that he was taking a stand against censorship, attempting to change Britain’s overly restrictive pornography laws. Unconvinced, the judge dismissed Waterfield’s claims as “humbug,” declaring that he was purely motivated by the profit of selling or screening imported material, which the police estimated to have a sale value of £30,000.Footnote 73 The jury, who viewed twenty-two of the seized films,Footnote 74 found him guilty, and the judge, who had a reputation for issuing harsh sentences, sentenced him to three years in prison and fines totaling £7,000.Footnote 75 Waterfield appealed his conviction, this time employing counsel. His defense focused on the severity of his sentence, arguing that indecency is a lesser charge than obscenity, which gives a two-year sentence. Therefore, the three-year sentence should be reduced. The judge agreed, determining that the films were in “touching distance of the border between indecency and obscenity,”Footnote 76 both highly problematic, subjective terms that have received much criticism.Footnote 77 Because of this, Waterfield had his sentence reduced from three years to eighteen months, the judge wanting to ensure that a “deterrent sentence” was still given to dissuade others from participating in the trade.Footnote 78

The debts from Waterfield’s court cases led to him selling both of his clubs. When released from prison, he cofounded an ethical company manufacturing bean bag chairs, selling them to high-street retailers. Although successful, he found the business uninspiring. He later became a silent partner in the Exxon Cinema Club’s eventual reopening, this time in his birth town of Southampton rather than north London. It opened in October 1976; police raided the premises in February 1977. This was used as a test case on cinema clubs showing pornographic films, with three men eventually being found guilty of keeping a disorderly house and keeping premises for the purposes of showing an indecent exhibition; Waterfield escaped prosecution.Footnote 79 By 1977, the Obscene Publications Act 1959 “was extended to cover all film exhibitions,”Footnote 80 and the introduction of the Cinemas Act 1985 ostensibly closed the loophole that enabled Waterfield’s enterprise. Now all cinema clubs were required to have licenses to operate and could only screen films certified by the BBFC. Although their numbers were reduced, hardcore cinema still clubs remained in operation. This foundational period of Waterfield’s enterprise is significant, as it shows how he made use of transnational networks to smuggle pornographic materials into Britain for sale at his cinema clubs. Ironically, it was these transnational networks that enabled Waterfield’s prosecution under the Customs and Excise Act 1952, something the Obscene Publications Act 1959 and Disorderly Houses Act 1751 were unable to achieve. When he later returned to the pornography business, the Netherlands would again feature in his transnational enterprise as he attempted to exploit another loophole in British obscenity law.

Your Choice

By the early 1980s, home video replaced 8 mm and Super 8. At first, it was unclear as to whether the Obscene Publications Act 1959 applied to this new technology, which led to several British pornography entrepreneurs distributing hardcore pornography on a range of formats, such as Betamax and VHS.Footnote 81 In 1980, a British court determined that video was an article under the Obscene Publications Act 1959Footnote 82 and the eventual introduction of the Video Recordings Act 1984 meant that all films released on video required certification by the renamed British Board of Film Classification. These regulations created a thriving black market and an under-the-counter trade in pirated video cassettes flourished; this was particularly lucrative for Soho’s sex shops. One interviewee named Dave, whose family were involved in running Soho bookshops from the mid-1960s onward, described how he and others profited from the demand for hardcore pornography on VHS, and relied on transnational networks to source content for duplication:

We’d fly to Amsterdam, visit the Scala warehouse in the Red Light District and buy original hardcore tapes. We’d then take the tapes apart with a mini-screwdriver and smuggle them back into the U.K. by just putting the small reels in our pockets. The tapes were put back together, and we’d copy them. They’d sell for £50 each in the sex shops … I had stacks of VHS decks running copies day and night.Footnote 83

However, it was more common for such sellers to take advantage of this demand:

Most punters would come in asking for a certain film or genre. Whatever it was, we’d always say we had it in stock. We kept tape stickers in the backroom and would go in there, find a tape, sometimes it would be blank, and then write the title on the sticker, attach it to the tape and sell it to the customer for at least £50. Funnily enough, we never had many returns.Footnote 84

Others, such as Steve, another sex shop owner, sold customers blank tapes.Footnote 85 After all, this was now an unregulated market that could easily be exploited.

Clark recalled how Waterfield retained an interest in the pornography trade and was aware of people being swindled. Living in Wales and struggling for money, the couple decided to set up a mail-order company selling hardcore pornography. Jay Gertzman suggests that mail order became an effective model for distributing pornography, as it appealed to a “large middle-income audience” who wanted to enjoy such material “in the privacy of their own homes, without the embarrassment of having to ask for them in … a bookshop.”Footnote 86 From the 1970s onward, it was not uncommon for British mail-order distributors of hardcore pornography to advertise in publications such as International Times and Exchange and Mart and use Dutch or Danish post boxes to receive orders from customers. Order forms were collected by a paid associate and telephoned back to Britain. The items would then be dispatched from within Britain, avoiding potential customs interference. Classified advertisements in early 1980s video magazines show that this transnational model for exchanging hardcore pornography had become commonplace. However, not all advertisements were genuine, scamming customers who expected hardcore. In interview, Clark told me how she and Waterfield both saw an opportunity to start a company that “did not rip customers off” and offered British citizens the same access to “adult entertainment” as those living in Europe.

In 1987, Waterfield and Clark placed an advert in the adult magazine Fiesta under the pseudonym “A. Evans,” offering a sample videotape for £5. According to Clark, the high number of responses demonstrated a demand for hardcore videotapes in Britain (see Figure 3). As discussed in the previous section, Waterfield had already established transnational connections with the Netherlands, using Amsterdam’s agents to export hardcore pornography for him to show and sell at his cinema clubs. Running such an enterprise in Britain would have been a criminal offense under the Obscene Publications Act 1959 and the Video Recordings Act 1984. The Netherlands offered a number of “location specific advantages” for Waterfield and Clark.Footnote 87 First, the distribution of pornography was permitted in the Netherlands; second, under European law, they could freely move to the country; and third, they could set up a legally registered company and accept orders from British customers. Their plan was to invest heavily in promotion, placing advertisements in the classified sections of adult magazines and others devoted to home video, offering a free catalog produced by Clark that contained a list of titles Waterfield curated (see Figures 4 and 5). On receipt of an order, it would be phoned through to an agent in Britain who duplicated the title and dispatched it from within the country to avoid HMCE. This transnational business model allowed Waterfield and Clark to circumvent British law and profit from hardcore pornography. However, it was not wholly exempt from possible legal trouble. Distributing indecent or obscene material via the Royal Mail was, and still is, a criminal offense under the Post Office Act 1953. Waterfield mitigated against this risk by using a reliable agent in Britain—Clark’s son Pannell—to dispatch the orders in discreet packaging using untitled video cassettes.

Figure 3. A selection of A. Evans and Your Choice advertisements. Courtesy of Pat Clark.

Figure 4. An example of an A. Evans catalog from 1988. Courtesy of Pat Clark.

Figure 5. A later Your Choice catalog from the early 1990s. Courtesy of Pat Clark.

In July 1987, they moved to Amsterdam, investing what little money they had brought with them into advertising in magazines. The company’s motto became “Satisfaction Guaranteed or Your Money Back.” In an economy dominated by many deceitful operators, this was a unique position to take, and one that Clark was skeptical of, believing that customers would take advantage of the offer. However, it helped to build trust among their customer base and enabled the business to grow. The company’s name was changed from “A. Evans” to “Your Choice,” reflecting their belief in offering customers the choice to view hardcore pornography should they so wish, contrasting with what was permitted under British law. By October 1987, they formally registered their residency with the Dutch authorities and the business Your Choice B.V. with the Dutch Chamber of Commerce. The choice of location carried an added benefit. Eric Schaefer has written about how Denmark’s and Sweden’s connections to sexual freedom were often referred to in advertisements found in American pornographic magazines, but also in the titles of films and distribution companies to signify “the hardest material.”Footnote 88 Waterfield and Clark’s association with Amsterdam carried a similar connotation in Britain, not necessarily one of a “sexy nation,” but a city with relaxed attitudes toward pornography, sex work, and drugs, perhaps adding further credibility to the company.Footnote 89

Initially, Your Choice distributed unlicensed films, pirating videos purchased from Amsterdam’s sex shops and smuggling them into Britain via a courier for Pannell to copy. Clark described one courier who used Sellotape to attach numerous VHS spools to a coat and brazenly walked through British customs, managing to evade their attention. As Colin Williams acknowledges, many new businesses adopt such informal and legally contentious practices on the journey to becoming registered companies.Footnote 90 Although piracy was unethical, it allowed for higher profit margins and growth. An early catalog from 1988 shows that titles were selling at prices ranging from £17.50 to £29.50. By now, a mailing list of 751 names and addresses had been accumulated. From interviews I have conducted with mail-order operators, it appears that mailing lists are an important currency, providing a targeted list of customers with similar tastes. It was not uncommon to sell mailing lists on to others wanting to start similar businesses. Clark recalled how they were unable to keep up with the high number of orders and quickly recruited an office staff and more British agents to support Pannell. After four years of selling unlicensed pornographic films, Waterfield contacted major international porn studios to license titles, purchasing the British copyrights for films, wanting the business to benefit all involved in the enterprise. According to Clark, the studios realized this was a lucrative opportunity, as only softcore edits of hardcore films were being licensed for release in Britain, with many being distributed via licensed sex shops, thus affecting their market reach.

After a deal had been negotiated, studios supplied Your Choice with master tapes. Once more, these were smuggled into Britain and passed on to agents for duplication. It also meant that customers received a copy of a film taken from a studio master rather than the usual “low-quality duplicates of duplicates” commonly in circulation.Footnote 91 A sister company named “Man Alive” was also introduced, specializing in the distribution of gay pornography and following the same business model as Your Choice. This expanded their customer base further, as access to hardcore gay pornography in Britain was limited.Footnote 92 Clark recalled how they wanted to maintain a strong relationship with customers and the film studios, running a legitimate business that contrasted with British-based enterprises that pirated tapes and offered an inferior product. They discovered that one of their British-based agents, a friend of Waterfield’s, had set up a competing company named “Hand Picked Films.” When dispatching Your Choice orders, this agent placed the Hand Picked Films catalog in the package, offering the same titles, but undercutting Your Choice’s prices by 50%. This demonstrates how entrepreneurs within the economy could take “advantage of the imperfections in the enforcement of laws and regulations” and exploit others in an unregulated market.Footnote 93 Hand Picked Films eventually based itself in Amsterdam, following Waterfield and Clark’s transnational model. However, it chose to pirate titles rather than purchasing rights from studios. To attract customers, Hand Picked Films offered a “free adult film of your choice.” Clark remembered being upset by this, believing that the agent had taken advantage of Waterfield and Clark’s good nature. From then on, Waterfield and Clark chose their agents carefully.

Operation Dare

By the mid-1990s, Your Choice’s transnational reach had expanded. Connections were established with pornography studios across Europe, such as Germany’s Hans Moser, Denmark’s Color Climax, and Sweden’s Private, but also in North America, where there was “an unexpectedly successful wave” of “gonzo” pornography from Evil Angel and Elegant Angel, among others.Footnote 94 Staff regularly attended international trade fairs and exhibitions to forge relationships with other studios and increase the range of content they sold. Monthly catalogs became increasingly professional, now printed on better-quality paper and featuring full-color images. Color advertisements appeared in the back pages of magazines, and Waterfield and Clark paid for space in British newspapers, investing money into promotion to support the company’s further growth. As Your Choice grew, it began to attract unwanted attention that threatened the business’s operation. First was a failed investigation by the popular British tabloid newspaper the News of the World, with their journalist Mazheer Mahmood, more colloquially known as the “Fake Sheikh” attempting to purchase a large amount of pornography, specifically child pornography.Footnote 95 Although the Netherlands made the production and distribution of child pornography an offense in 1985,Footnote 96 the country still found itself associated with its trade.Footnote 97 According to Clark, Your Choice never sold child pornography, only dealing in what they termed “non-violent adult entertainment.” She recalled how Waterfield quickly realized that they were being set up and they both left the meeting, much to the ire of Mahmood.

Although this attempted sting was unsuccessful, it highlights Your Choice’s increasing transnational profile and precarious legal position in Britain. Despite operating lawfully in the Netherlands, Your Choice’s posting of indecent or obscene material via Britain’s Royal Mail network remained a crime. This flaw in its transnational business model was utilized by Manchester Police to pursue a police investigation into the British arm of Your Choice’s operation. In 1994, police arrested a Manchester-based Your Choice agent for reusing postage stamps, a criminal offense under section 62 of the Post Offices Act 1959. Agents were provided with a budget to cover postage, but this person had been photocopying stamps and affixing them to the envelopes that contained Your Choice catalogs to increase earnings. Instead of prosecuting, Manchester police persuaded the agent to infiltrate the company. Operation Dare, the name reflecting Waterfield’s signature on his letters as “Dave,” was put into action. The arrested agent was asked to name other British-based agents; staff based in the Netherlands were protected under Dutch law.

In May 1995, after a yearlong investigation led by the Manchester police’s vice squad, the majority of Your Choice’s British agents were arrested in raids taking place across the country, resulting in a total of thirty-one arrests for conspiracy to publish obscene articles. On May 15, 1995, the Daily Echo devoted three pages to the story, featuring an interview with Waterfield.Footnote 98 According to the article, the raid’s purpose was to shut down the British arm of Your Choice, as it would limit the company’s ability to function. Waterfield bragged “even after the raids, we are still getting orders, and we will fulfil them” and outlined plans to replenish the sub-master tapes seized in the raids.Footnote 99 The article also hints at the company’s success, referring to Your Choice as a “multi-million-pound business” and calling for stricter laws to control the transnational trade in pornography by closing the loophole used by Your Choice.Footnote 100

Clark admitted that she was concerned about how the raid would impact the business, particularly given the attention Operation Dare received in the national press. In response, Waterfield wrote to every customer on their mailing list, personally informing them of the situation and the delay in sending out orders. Instead of driving customers away, Clark found that orders kept coming in via post and phone: “Many sent kind letters of support and some even enclosed payment for goods to be dispatched when possible, despite not knowing when they would receive their orders.” For Clark, it was the “Satisfaction Guaranteed” motto that established a strong relationship with their customers and helped the company withstand Operation Dare.

Once the British network was back up and running, Waterfield turned his attention to the agents in custody and awaiting trial. The company archive shows that he wrote a letter to each arresting officer, offering to take the place of those arrested. Clark informed me that his proposals were rejected. Instead, Waterfield and Clark paid for all the associated legal costs and financially supported the families of those arrested. Many agents were charged under offenses relating to the Obscene Publications Act 1959 and the Postal Services Act 1953. For those found guilty, sentences ranged from nine months in prison and a fine for one man to community service and fines for others; these ranged from £500 to £10,000. The inconsistencies of sentencing further highlight the Obscene Publications Act’s 1959 limitations as a legal mechanism for regulating pornography.Footnote 101 Operation Dare had little impact on Your Choice’s transnational operations, though it did highlight the risks taken by British-based agents. After Your Choice recruited new agents, all orders were eventually fulfilled. However, the investigation affected Waterfield, and Clark believed that it contributed to Waterfield’s leaving Your Choice and emigrating to Thailand in 1996. They divorced in 1997. The end of the 1990s was a crucial time for the company, as the new distribution technologies of DVD and the Internet were emerging. Furthermore, the BBFC “experimented with passing non-simulated sex” in R18 certified porn films.Footnote 102

Diversification

With Waterfield gone, Clark and Pannell took control, seeking to diversify the business (see Figure 6). They soon moved into production, starting the sister company Your Choice Productions. This started after a British customer sent homemade pornography to Your Choice, asking if the company would be interested in releasing it. They placed a request for homemade amateur content in the catalog, offering £15 per minute of footage, up to a maximum of twenty-five minutes, as well as a £500 bonus for “particularly stellar material.” Those providing footage had to provide evidence that they were over 18 and were assured that any sensitive personal information would be protected under the Netherlands’ Personal Data Protection Act. Clark remembered how their expectations were exceeded: “We received so much material from enthusiastic couples we could barely keep up. The Viewers Wives series has proved to be one of our most popular lines.” In discussing online amateur pornography, Susanna Paasonen claims that it connotes “a better kind of porn that is ethical in its principles of production, but also somehow more real, raw and innovative than commercially produced.”Footnote 103 This may, in part, suggest why the line was so successful for Your Choice, offering a more realistic representation of sex than that commonly found in the conventional, studio-produced pornography that dominated their catalogs. According to Clark, it also fulfilled customer demand for hardcore British content, which was then a scarce commodity, as it was unable to be legally sold in Britain.

Figure 6. Press picture of Pat Clark. Courtesy of Pat Clark.

By the end of the 1990s, moving into production turned out to be a shrewd tactic. Following a review of the R18 certificate, the sale of hardcore pornography became legally permitted in Britain.Footnote 104 Now hardcore pornography could lawfully be purchased at licensed sex shops and imported from outside Britain without the threat of customs interference, providing that the “material was not in breach of criminal law.”Footnote 105 Your Choice, in keeping with its commitment to customer satisfaction, continued to sidestep HMCE by sending orders via their usual network of agents. Eventually, this was replaced when they employed a Dutch courier company. According to pornographer Terry Stephens, “The British market for hardcore pornography grew rapidly … this was also driven by new DVD format.”Footnote 106 Bulky VHS tapes became increasingly redundant, as the introduction of DVD in 1998 resulted in mass consumer adoption of the technology.Footnote 107 While the smaller footprint and lighter weight of DVDs made them cheaper to store and post, being almost half the cost of a VHS tape, they also carried extra costs. Previously, the British rights purchased from studios allowed them to produce as many VHS tapes as they required, but now each DVD unit had to be bought from the producers at wholesale prices; for U.S.-based companies, this varied between $6 and $18. Their loyal customer base continued to support Your Choice, appreciating the convenience of not having to visit a licensed sex shop to purchase hardcore pornography.

Now having greater responsibility, Pannell decided to develop Your Choice’s position as a transnational producer and distributor, establishing 24 Carat Productions and employing a production team. His vision was to provide not only filmmaking and editing facilities, but also to give access to distribution via Your Choice, which according to Pannell was “particularly difficult for young producers trying to get started.” This relationship with producers was mutually beneficial, particularly for large-scale wholesalers who preferred to “buy large quantities of multiple titles” rather than “buying from producers who only have one or two titles to offer.” Stephens, a British producer recruited by Pannell, had fond memories of his time working for the company:

It’s ironic as I started off pirating Your Choice’s tapes in the late nineties. I sent some of my earliest films to them for inclusion in their Viewer’s Wives series and ended up winning their bonus prize for my footage … years later I was contacted by them to make the One Eyed Jack series, which ended up being one of their best sellers. I was flown over to Amsterdam and really looked after; I felt like I was inducted into a family. Until I worked with Your Choice I was an underground filmmaker, making and distributing my own films. I suppose they brought me into the mainstream.Footnote 108

Company documents show that Stephens’s One Eyed Jack series was one of the company’s better-selling releases, alongside other Your Choice productions, further demonstrating the demand for original British content.

Pornography’s relationship with technologies has been well documented. For example, Jonathan Coopersmith suggests that accelerated technological change has constantly “shaken the [pornography] industry … forcing companies to reinvent themselves to survive,”Footnote 109 while Alilunas notes how pornography is often a driver for new technologies.Footnote 110 Clark explained how the company always “kept on top of new technological developments,” releasing pornography on CD-ROM in the mid-1990s and opening an online shop in June 1997. While the move from VHS to DVD provided further growth for Your Choice, the advent of the Internet presented both new opportunities for enterprise and significant challenges. According to Gerald Spindler, the “Internet knows no borders and facilitates transnational trade.”Footnote 111 Other transnational online enterprises specializing in distributing hardcore pornography to Britain emerged, such as Simply Adult, creating greater competition. Sensing a need for change, Clark and Pannell restructured the company in 2004, bringing in management from outside the adult sector. In 2005, Your Choice established Night Streams to offer a streaming platform for their productions and other content makers. It also responded to the need for an online presence, creating websites with an online shop and streaming facilities.

In 2006, they released more titles than in previous years, embracing the move to high-definition technology, investing in new production equipment to further attract producers to use their facilities. Yet Your Choice became one of the numerous porn companies affected by the disruption of online streaming platforms such as Pornhub and xHamster, which transnationally distribute commercially produced pornography alongside homemade, amateur porn for free. As Paasonen points out, “the profits of porn have shifted from production, DVD and magazine retail to key video aggregator sites, giving select players unprecedented control over audience access to adult content on a global scale.”Footnote 112 With Your Choice focusing heavily on the British market, this shift in pornography distribution greatly affected the company’s finances, despite their attempts to innovate and diversify.

Bankruptcy

I visited Your Choice in 2018, shortly after the business celebrated its thirtieth anniversary. On my arrival, Pannell explained that the company had been through several restructures and relocations to increasingly smaller premises, occupying part of a floor of an office block just outside Amsterdam. At its height, Your Choice employed around sixty staff, now reduced to five people with one absent on long-term sickness. The inventory stock of DVDs was surprisingly small. The changes brought on by the growth of online distribution of pornography were apparent and had impacted on Pannell’s own well-being. He was candid about how running the business affected his health and expressed concern for its future. Yet I was surprised at the number of orders phoned through. “Our new catalog was released last week,” Pannell told me. “We always see a surge in orders the week after, mostly from customers who have been with us for years.” One could see the company’s personable and friendly nature as an employee chatted at length with customers.

It seemed that Your Choice had returned to its roots, primarily distributing pornography in a physical format rather than producing it. Pannell talked about how they now focused on purchasing the rights to scenes from popular online brands and releasing them as compilations on DVD. He described how many of their older clientele are nervous about using computers or paying for pornography online using a credit card, preferring to buy pornography on a physical format from a company they can trust. After spending time with Pannell and Clark, it appeared to me that the business had a niche, and while it was not as financially successful as it had been in the past, it relied on a strong, loyal, British customer base to sustain it. Clark believed that this was a legacy of Waterfield’s commitment to running a business that benefited all of those it affected and the “Satisfaction Guaranteed” pledge.

Pannell was more skeptical about the long term, expressing concern about the company being able to survive the impact of Brexit. Although Your Choice was a Dutch business, it took payment in pounds sterling only. By late 2018, the value of the pound dropped to levels not seen since 1985 in response to concerns about a no-deal Brexit, with some experts predicting the pound would eventually reach parity with the euro.Footnote 113 Clark described how this “entirely removed” any small profit, making it increasingly difficult to keep the company afloat. Around this time, the majority of the staff took sick leave, including the graphics designer who produced the monthly catalogs sent to those on the mailing list; according to Clark, this was their “primary source of income.” Sick leave was paid to the staff, as in accordance with Dutch employment law, further affecting the company’s financial resources. On September 17, 2019, I received an email from Clark, informing me that the company’s income was “decimated,” and recent turnover was only 15% of what it had been three months earlier, with no chance of improvement. A Dutch court declared bankruptcy on that very day, ending thirty-two years of trading and a history dating back to the early 1970s when Waterfield opened his first cinema club in north London. The transnational model of business that initially allowed Your Choice to thrive now had contributed to its closure.

Conclusion

Your Choice’s forty-year history demonstrates how transnationality plays an important factor in pornography businesses and is not solely about expanding market reach. First, it has shown how transnational links present opportunity, whether it be networks for smuggling pornographic materials across borders or relocating to countries that offer location-specific advantagesFootnote 114 that provide favorable conditions for doing trade. Second, transnational trading enables the manipulation of laws and other regulations. By basing itself in the Netherlands, Your Choice ran a registered business that distributed pornography to Britain, evading the Obscene Publications Act 1959 and the Video Recordings Act 1984. In this instance, transnationality can be seen as a form of “evasive entrepreneurship,” where there is an “expenditure of resources and efforts in evading the legal system or in avoiding the unproductive activities of other agents.”Footnote 115 Yet this also brings risk, as the legal battles I have discussed illustrate. For example, Waterfield’s early prosecution for smuggling obscene materials enabled his prosecution and ended his cinema clubs, while Operation Dare highlighted how the legal frameworks of different countries can affect business. Third, Your Choice’s enterprise history illustrates the impact of technological change, particularly how new technologies changed the transnational distribution of pornography, with the Internet being particularly transformative, altering how pornography is circulated and consumed. Finally, uncontrollable economic change was also a factor, with Your Choice’s focus on British market ultimately leading to its closure following the impact of Brexit.

In this article, I have attempted to show how approaching the pornography business as a transnational trade can provide further understanding of pornography entrepreneurship. Looking at the relationship between the national and transnational in other long-running pornography enterprises would therefore help to shed greater light on how the pornography economy functions, historically and contemporaneously, and the ways it responds to regulation. Furthermore, it emphasizes the need for interdisciplinary approaches to explore this activity. As I have suggested here, ideas from law, economic geography, and criminology can be useful when investigating how pornography entrepreneurs trade transnationally and pornography’s movement between licit and illicit spaces over extended periods of time.

Despite Your Choice no longer operating, the brand continues to live on. In mid-2020, www.yourchoicedvd.co.uk appeared, using the same company branding. Additionally, the long-running Spain-based pornography enterprise Simply Adult adopted the original Your Choice domain name—www.yourchoice.nl—whichnow diverts to Simply Adult’s online shop. The reasons behind this are not clear, but it suggests that the brand still has currency within the economy, perhaps signifying a lasting value among other British pornography entrepreneurs and consumers.

Acknowledgement

The author would like to thank Patricia Clark and Jayson Pannell for their time and generosity, as well as Terry Stephens, Edward Goodman, and J. J. Marsh for their contributions to this article.

Footnotes

1. Tate, Child Pornography: An Investigation, 59–60.

2. Gertzman, Bookleggers and Smuthounds; Schaefer, “Dirty Little Secrets”; Strub, Perversion for Profit, Alilunas, Smutty Little Movies; Gorfinkel, Lewd Looks.

3. Arnberg, “Under the Counter, Under the Radar?”; Arnberg, “Before the Scandinavian ‘Porn Wave”; Larsson, The Swedish Porn Scene; Thorsen, “Family Porn—the Zodiac Film.”

4. Heineman, Before Porn Was Legal.

5. Maina and Zecca, “Turn on the Red Light.”

6. Tachou, Et le sexe entra dans la modernité; Callwood, “Anxiety and Desire.”

7. Smith, “A Perfectly British Business”; Cocks “‘The Social Picture of Our Own Times’”; Carter “Original Climax Films.”

8. Colligan, The Traffic in Obscenity; Colligan, A Publisher’s Paradise.

9. Stoops, The Thorny Path.

10. Larsson, “A National/Transnational Genre”; Larsson, The Swedish Porn Scene; Larsson, “Oh Paris.

11. Smith, “A Perfectly British Business.”

12. Saunier, Transnational History.

13. Rawle, Transnational Cinema.

14. Faist, Fauser, and Reisenauer, Transnational Migration.

15. Kiwan and Meinhof, Cultural Globalization and Music.

16. Reichel and Albanese, Handbook of Transnational Crime and Justice.

17. Bailetti, “Transnational Entrepreneurship,” 34.

18. Lan and Zhu, “Chinese Apparel Value Chains in Europe.”

19. Ojo, “Ethnic Enclaves to Diaspora Entrepreneurs.”

20. Larsson, “A National/Transnational Genre.”

21. Ibid., 220.

22. Serrano, “Transnational Organized Crime,” 15.

23. McClister, “Prohibition of Obscene Imports,” 346.

24. Larsson, “Oh Paris!,” 158.

25. Dunning and Lundan, Multinational Enterprises, 96.

26. Leeson and Coyne, “The Plight of Underdeveloped Countries.”

27. Cannatelli, Smith, and Sydow, “Entrepreneurship in the Controversial Economy.”

28. Williams, Hard Core; Dean, Ruszczycky, and Squires, Porn Archives; Alilunas, Smutty Little Movies.

29. Schaefer, “Dirty Little Secrets.”

30. Kuhn, Everyday Magic, 6.

31. Doctrinal research is “a process used to identify, analyse and synthesise the content of the law.” This method was critical in helping to understanding the legal contexts for pornography, as well as locating legal documents detailing transnational transactions and attempts made to regulate such trade. Hutchinson, “Doctrinal Research,” 9.

32. This article draws on findings from a British Academy– supported project titled ‘The Transnational Trade in Hardcore Pornography Between Britain, Scandinavia and the Netherlands” that took place between 2019 and 2020. The project sought to explore how histories of the European pornography business interconnect, generating new knowledge of its production, distribution, and regulation.

33. Hammersley and Atkinson, Ethnography, 183.

34. Alilunas, Smutty Little Movies, 27–30.

35. Mort, Capital Affairs, 23.

36. Deep Throat, directed by Gerald Damiano (1972; Sunset Entertainment, 2018), Blu-ray.

37. Barnett, “‘The Most Profitable Film Ever Made,’” 15.

38. Basu, “The Role of Transnational Smuggling,”, n.pg.

39. Hebditch and Anning, Porn Gold, 212.

40. Carter, “Original Climax Films.”

41. Basu, “The Role of Transnational Smuggling Operations,” n.pg.

42. Simpson, Pornography and Politics, 14.

43. Cocks, “Conspiracy to Corrupt Public Morals,” 274.

44. Hebditch and Anning, Porn Gold, 216.

45. Spicer and McKenna, The Man Who Got Carter.

46. Schaefer, “Plain Brown Wrapper,” 214.

47. “Vice Touts on Wheels,” The People, July 12, 1964, 15.

48. Clark informed me that Waterfield was sued by the American petroleum company Exxon Mobil for using their trade name. Exxon lost the case when the judge ruled in Waterfield’s, favor, declaring that there was clear distinction between the business interests of each party. According to Clark, this is why Exxon trades in the United Kingdom as Esso. I have been unable to verify this claim but chose to include it here, as it further exemplifies the myths that surround entrepreneurs. See Shane, The Illusions of Entrepreneurship.

49. Love, “Where to Go If You’re Feeling Blue,” 12–13.

50. Ibid.

51. See Killick, The Sultan of Sleaze.

52. For a more detailed account of the corruption that existed in the Dirty Squad, see Cox, Shirley, and Short, The Fall of Scotland Yard.

53. Tomkinson, The Pornbrokers, 53–54.

54. R. v. Waterfield (1975).

55. Average weekly earnings data taken from the Office of National Statistics: https://tinyurl.com/ywe3hcrn.

56. “Cinema Laws,” Forum: International Journal of Human Relations, November 1975, 31–34.

57. Button, A Dictionary of Green Ideas, 87.

58. Waterfield appeared on an episode of The Frost Programme, broadcast October 28, 1973, on ITV.

59. Robertson, Obscenity, 210.

60. Ibid., 211.

61. “Cinema Laws,” Forum, 31–34.

62. Ibid.

63. Kutchinsky and Snare, Law, Pornography and Crime.

64. McClister, “Prohibition of Obscene Imports.”

65. Robertson, Obscenity, 178.

66. R. v. Waterfield (1975).

67. Ferris, Sex and the British, 261.

68. See DPP2/5759, DPP2/5765, and DPP2/5779.

69. Hebditch and Anning, Porn Gold.

70. The case is described in DPP2/5759, DPP2/5765, and DPP2/5779.

71. According to the Crown Prosecution Service, “Severance may be ordered where the admissibility of the evidence is not the same against each defendant or where the case would otherwise be too long and complicated.” See www.cps.gov.uk/legal-guidance/drafting-indictment.

72. “Deep Throat Seven Cleared,” Daily Mirror, June 24, 1974. 4.

73. R. v. Waterfield (1975).

74. See “All-Male Jury Sees Sex Film,” Daily Mail, June 1, 1974, 11; and “Nine-Hour Sex Film Show for Jury,” Birmingham Post, May 31, 1974, 9.

75. Ibid.

76. Ibid.

77. Robertson, Obscenity; Woozley, “The Tendency to Deprave and Corrupt.”

78. R. v. Waterfield (1975); and “Blue Film Club Owner Has Sentence Cut,” The Times, February 18, 1975, 4.

79. “Three Jailed in Porn Films Test Case,” The Journal, November 8, 1977. 2.

80. Robertson, Obscenity, 258.

81. See R v. Holloway (1982).

82. See Attorney General’s Reference (No. 5 of 1980).

83. “Dave,” interview by author, London, Friday, December 1, 2017.

84. Ibid.

85. “Steve,” telephone interview by author, Monday, June 22, 2020.

86. Gertzman, Bookleggers and Smuthounds, 186.

87. Dunning and Lundan, Multinational Enterprises, 96.

88. Schaefer, “‘I’ll Take Sweden,’” 228–229.

89. Hekma, “A Radical Break with a Puritanical Past.”

90. Williams, The Hidden Enterprise Culture.

91. Church, Disposable Passions, 125.

92. See O’Toole, Pornocopia, 146–148.

93. Webb et al., “You Say Illegal, I Say Legitimate,” 500.

94. According to Biasin and Zecca, “gonzo” is a term used to describe a “successful wave of first-person and more ‘realistic’ pornographic products that sprung seemingly out of nowhere at the end of the 1980s.” See Biasin and Zecca, “Introduction: Inside Gonzo Porn,” 332.

95. This was not the first attempt to use such a method to investigate Britain’s transnational trade in hardcore pornography. Back in 1970, The People also utilized a “Fake Sheikh” in attempt to reveal the practices of pornographer of Evan “Big Jeff” Phillips, who was a prolific producer of rollers; 200 ft, 8 mm films produced in Britain during the 1960s and 1970s. The sting failed, but the under-the-counter trade was eventually revealed by The People on November 5, 1970. See Cox, Shirley, and Short, The Fall of Scotland Yard, 140–141.

96. Hebditch and Anning, Porn Gold, 322.

97. Tate, Child Pornography, 44.

98. Shearsmith, “Mr Big’s Porn Boast Shame,” Daily Echo, 1–3.

99. Ibid.

100. Ibid.

101. Beresford, “Obscene Performative Pornography,” 387.

102. Hunter, “Naughty Realism,” 154.

103. Paasonen, “Labors of Love,” 1302.

104. Perkins, “Pornography, Policing and Censorship”; Petley, Film and Video Censorship.

105. Petley, Film and Video Censorship, 154.

106. Terry Stephens, interview by author, London, Wednesday, January 11, 2017.

107. Church, Disposable Passions, 162.

108. Terry Stephens, interview by author, London, Wednesday, January 11, 2017.

109. Coopersmith, “Pornography, Technology and Progress,” 95.

110. Alilunas, Smutty Little Movies, 32.

111. Spindler, “The Standardization of the Internet,” 100.

112. Paasonen, “Blocked Access,” 168.

113. Inman and Davies, “Pound Falls to Lowest Level in Three Years as Brexit Clash Looms.”

114. Dunning and Lundan, Multinational Enterprises, 96.

115. Leeson and Coyne, “The Plight of Underdeveloped Countries,” 4.

References

Bibliography of Works Cited

Alilunas, Peter. Smutty Little Movies: The Creation and Regulation of Adult Video. California: University of California Press, 2016.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Button, John. A Dictionary of Green Ideas. London: Routledge, 2019.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Church, David. Disposable Passions: Vintage Pornography and the Material Legacies of Adult Cinema. London: Bloomsbury, 2016.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Colligan, Colette. The Traffic in Obscenity from Byron to Beardsley: Sexuality and Exoticism in Nineteenth-Century Print Culture. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2006.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Colligan, Colette. A Publisher’s Paradise: Expatriate Literary Culture in Paris, 1890–1960. Boston: University of Massachusetts Press, 2014.Google Scholar
Cox, Barry, Shirley, John, and Short, Martin. The Fall of Scotland Yard. Middlesex: Penguin, 1977.Google Scholar
Dean, Tim, Ruszczycky, Steven, and Squires, David D.. Porn Archives. London: Duke University Press, 2014.Google Scholar
Dunning, John H., and Lundan, Sarianna M.. Multinational Enterprises and the Global Economy. Chichester, UK: Edward Elgar, 2008.Google Scholar
Faist, Thomas, Fauser, Margit, and Reisenauer, Eveline. Transnational Migration. Chichester, UK: Wiley, 2013.Google Scholar
Ferris, Paul. Sex and the British. London: Michael Joseph, 1993.Google Scholar
Gertzman, Jay A. Bookleggers and Smuthounds: The Trade in Erotica, 1920–1940. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1999.Google Scholar
Gorfinkel, Elena. Lewd Looks. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2017.Google Scholar
Hammersley, Martin, and Atkinson, Paul. Ethnography: Principles in Practice. London: Routledge, 2007.Google Scholar
Hebditch, David, and Anning, Nick. Porn Gold: Inside the Pornography Business. London: Faber and Faber, 1988.Google Scholar
Heineman, Elizabeth. Before Porn Was Legal: The Erotic Empire of Beate Uhse. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2011.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Killick, Mark. The Sultan of Sleaze: The Story of David Sullivan’s Sex and Media Empire. London: Penguin, 1994.Google Scholar
Kiwan, Nadia, and Meinhof, Ulrike Hanna. Cultural Globalization and Music: African Artists in Transnational Networks. Basingstoke, UK: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kuhn, Annette. Everyday Magic: Cinema and Cultural Memory. London: IB Tauris, 2002.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kutchinsky, Berl, and Snare, Annika. Law, Pornography and Crime: The Danish Experience. Oslo: Pax Forlag, 1999.Google Scholar
Larsson, Mariah. The Swedish Porn Scene: Exhibition Contexts, 8mm Pornography and the Sex Film. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2016.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mort, Frank. Capital Affairs: London and the Making of the Permissive Society. London: Yale University Press, 2010.Google Scholar
O’Toole, Laurence. Pornocopia. London: Serpents Tail, 1999.Google Scholar
Petley, Julian. Film and Video Censorship in Contemporary Britain. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2011.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rawle, Steven. Transnational Cinema. Basingstoke, UK: Palgrave Macmillan, 2017.Google Scholar
Reichel, Philip, and Albanese, Jay. Handbook of Transnational Crime and Justice. London: Sage, 2013.Google Scholar
Robertson, Geoffrey. Obscenity. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1979.Google Scholar
Saunier, Pierre-Yves. Transnational History. Basingstoke, UK: Palgrave Macmillan, 2013.Google Scholar
Shane, Scott A. The Illusions of Entrepreneurship. London: Yale University Press, 2008.Google Scholar
Simpson, A. W. B. Pornography & Politics: The Williams Committee in Retrospect. Exeter, UK: Pergamon, 1983Google Scholar
Spicer, Andrew, and McKenna, A. T.. The Man Who Got Carter. London: Bloomsbury Publishing, 2013.Google Scholar
Stoops, Jamie. The Thorny Path. Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2018.Google Scholar
Strub, Whitney. Perversion for Profit: The Politics of Pornography and the Rise of the New Right. New York: Columbia University Press, 2011.Google Scholar
Tachou, Frédéric. Et le sexe entra dans la modernité: photographie «obscéne» et cinéma pornographique primitif, aux origines d’une industrie. Paris: Klincksieck, 2013.Google Scholar
Tate, Tim. Child Pornography: An Investigation. London: Trafalgar Square, 1990.Google Scholar
Tomkinson, Martin. The Pornbrokers: The Rise of the Soho Sex Barons. London: Virgin, 1982.Google Scholar
Williams, Colin. The Hidden Enterprise Culture: Entrepreneurship in the Underground Economy. Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar, 2006.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Williams, Linda. Hard Core: Power, Pleasure, and the Frenzy of the Visible. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1989.Google Scholar
Arnberg, Klara. “Under the Counter, Under the Radar? The Business and Regulation of the Pornographic Press in Sweden 1950–1971.” Enterprise & Society 13, no. 2 (2012): 350377.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Arnberg, Klara. “Before the Scandinavian ‘Porn Wave’: The Business and Regulations of Magazines Considered Obscene in Sweden, 1910–1950.” Porn Studies 4, no. 1 (2017): 422.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bailetti, Eduardo. “Transnational Entrepreneurship: Distinctive Features and a New Definition.” Technology Innovation Management Review 8, no. 9 (2018): 2838.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barnett, Vincent L.‘The Most Profitable Film Ever Made’: Deep Throat (1972), Organized Crime, and the $600 Million Gross.” Porn Studies 5, no. 2 (2018): 131151.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Basu, Gautam. “The Role of Transnational Smuggling Operations in Illicit Supply Chains.” Journal of Transportation Security 6, no. 4 (2013): 315328.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beresford, Sarah. “Obscene Performative Pornography: R v Peacock (2012) and the Legal Construction of Same-Sex and Gendered Identities in the United Kingdom.” Porn Studies 1, no. 4 (2014): 378–90.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Biasin, Enrico, and Zecca, Federico. “Introduction: Inside Gonzo Porn.” Porn Studies 3, no. 4 (2016): 332336.Google Scholar
Callwood, Dan. “Anxiety and Desire in France’s Gay Pornographic Film Boom, 1974–1983.” Journal of the History of Sexuality 26, no. 1 (2017): 2652.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cannatelli, Benedetto Lorenzo, Smith, Brett Richard, and Sydow, Alisa. “Entrepreneurship in the Controversial Economy: Toward a Research Agenda.” Journal of Business Ethics 155, no. 3 (2019): 837851.Google Scholar
Carter, Oliver. “Original Climax Films: Historicizing the British Hardcore Pornography Film Business.” Porn Studies 5, no. 4 (2018): 411425.Google Scholar
Cocks, Harry. “Conspiracy to Corrupt Public Morals and the ‘Unlawful’ Status of Homosexuality in Britain After 1967.” Social History 41, no. 3 (2016): 267284.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cocks, Harry. “‘The Social Picture of Our Own Times’: Reading Obscene Magazines in Mid-Twentieth-Century Britain.” Twentieth Century British History 27, no. 2 (2016): 171194.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coopersmith, Jonathan. “Pornography, Technology and Progress.” Icon 4 (1998): 94125.Google Scholar
Hekma, Gert. “A Radical Break with a Puritanical Past: The Dutch Case.” In Sexual Revolutions, edited by Hekma, Gert and Giami, Alain, 6080. London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2014.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hunter, I. Q.Naughty Realism: The Britishness of British Hardcore.” Journal of British Cinema and Television 11, nos. 2–3 (2014): 152171.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hutchinson, Terry. “Doctrinal Research: Researching the Jury.” In Research Methods in Law, edited by Watkins, Dawn, and Burton, Mandy, 839. London: Routledge, 2013.Google Scholar
Lan, Tu, and Zhu, Shengjun. “Chinese Apparel Value Chains in Europe: Low-End Fast Fashion, Regionalization, and Transnational Entrepreneurship in Prato, Italy.” Eurasian Geography and Economics 55, no. 2 (2014): 156–74.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Larsson, Mariah. “A National/Transnational Genre: Pornography in Transition.” In Nordic Genre Film: Small Nation Film Cultures in the Global Marketplace, edited by Gustafsson, Tommy and Kääpä, Pietari, 217229. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2015.Google Scholar
Larsson, Mariah. “Oh Paris! The Journeys of Lasse Braun’s 8mm Pornography.” Journal of Cinema and Media Studies 58, no. 1 (2018): 158163.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Leeson, Peter T., and Coyne, Christopher J.. “The Plight of Underdeveloped Countries: Institutions and the Direction of Entrepreneurial Activity with Evidence from Romania.” Mercatus Center at George Mason University, 2004, accessed March 8, 2021, https://www.peterleeson.com/The_Plight_of_Underdeveloped_Countries--Coyne_and_Leeson.pdf.Google Scholar
Maina, Giovanna, and Zecca, Federico. “Turn on the Red Light: Notes on the Birth of Italian Pornography.” Porn Studies (2021): 125.Google Scholar
McClister, Chase G.Prohibition of Obscene Imports in the United Kingdom-a Violation of Article 36 of the Treaty Establishing the European Community.” Penn State International Law Review 13, no. 2 (1994): 329346.Google Scholar
Ojo, Sanya. “Ethnic Enclaves to Diaspora Entrepreneurs: A Critical Appraisal of Black British Africans’ Transnational Entrepreneurship in London.” Journal of African Business 13, no. 2 (2012): 145156.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Paasonen, Susanna. “Labors of Love: Netporn, Web 2.0 and the Meanings of Amateurism.” New Media & Society 12, no. 8 (2010): 12971312.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Paasonen, Susanna. “Blocked Access: When Pornographers Take Offence.” In Media and the Politics of Offence, edited by Graefer, Anne, 165–85. London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2019.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Perkins, Murray. “Pornography, Policing and Censorship.” In Policing Sex, edited by Johnson, Paul and Dalton, Derek, 8598. London: Routledge, 2012.Google Scholar
Schaefer, Eric. “Dirty Little Secrets: Scholars, Archivists and Dirty Movies.” Moving Image 5, no. 2 (2005): 79105.Google Scholar
Schaefer, Eric. “Plain Brown Wrapper.” In Looking Past the Screen: Case Studies in American Film History and Method, edited by Lewis, Jon, and Smoodin, Eric, 201226. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2007.Google Scholar
Schaefer, Eric. “‘I’ll Take Sweden’: The Shifting Discourse of the ‘Sexy Nation’ in Sexploitation Films.” In Sex Scene: Media and the Sexual Revolution, edited by Schaefer, Eric, 207234. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2014.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Serrano, M.Transnational Organized Crime and International Security: Business as Usual?” In Transnational Organized Crime & International Security: Business as Usual?, edited by Berdal, M. and Serrano, M., 1336. Boulder, CO: Lynne Rienner, 2002.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, Clarissa. “A Perfectly British Business: Stagnation, Continuities and Change on the Top Shelf.” In International Exposure: Perspectives on Modern Pornography 1800–2000, edited by Sigel, Lisa Z., 146172. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 2005.Google Scholar
Spindler, Gerald. “The Standardization of the Internet and the International Harmonization of Ecommerce.” In The Role of the EU in Transnational Legal Ordering, edited by Gamito, Marta Cantero and Micklitz, Hans W., 100114. Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar, 2020.Google Scholar
Thorsen, Isak. “Family Porn—the Zodiac Film: Popular Comedy with Hard-Core Sex.” Journal of Scandinavian Cinema 4, no. 3 (2014): 289304.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Webb, Justin W., Laszlo Tihanyi, R. Duane Ireland, and Sirmon, David G.. “You Say Illegal, I Say Legitimate: Entrepreneurship in the Informal Economy.” Academy of Management Review 34, no. 3 (2009): 492510.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Woozley, A. D.The Tendency to Deprave and Corrupt.” Law and Philosophy 1, no. 2 (1982): 217–38.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Inman, Phillip, and Davies, Rob. “Pound Falls to Lowest Level in Three Years as Brexit Clash Looms.” The Guardian, September 3, 2019. https://www.theguardian.com/business/2019/sep/03/pound-falls-lowest-level-three-years-brexit-election-sterling.Google Scholar
Love, Jenny. “Where to Go If You’re Feeling Blue.Experience 4, no. 3 (n.d.), 1213.Google Scholar
Shearsmith, Martin. “Mr Big’s Porn Boast Shame.The Daily Echo, May 15, 1995, 13.Google Scholar
National Archives, UK, Director of Public Prosecutions, DPP2/5759, Virgo, Wallace Harold and others: corruption offences between January 1, 1964, and October 24, 1972.Google Scholar
National Archives, UK, Director of Public Prosecutions, DPP2/5765, Virgo, Wallace Harold and others: corruption offences between January 1, 1964, and October 24, 1972.Google Scholar
National Archives, UK, Director of Public Prosecutions, DPP2/5778, Virgo, Wallace Harold and others: corruption offences between January 1, 1964, and October 24, 1972.Google Scholar
Attorney General’s Reference (No. 5 of 1980) [1980] 3 All ER 816.Google Scholar
R. v. Holloway [1982].Google Scholar
R. v Waterfield (David) [1975] 1 W.L.R. 711.Google Scholar
Birmingham Post Google Scholar
Daily Mail Google Scholar
Daily Mirror Google Scholar
Forum: International Journal of Human Relations Google Scholar
The Journal Google Scholar
The People Google Scholar
The Times Google Scholar
Up Against the Law Google Scholar
Alilunas, Peter. Smutty Little Movies: The Creation and Regulation of Adult Video. California: University of California Press, 2016.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Button, John. A Dictionary of Green Ideas. London: Routledge, 2019.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Church, David. Disposable Passions: Vintage Pornography and the Material Legacies of Adult Cinema. London: Bloomsbury, 2016.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Colligan, Colette. The Traffic in Obscenity from Byron to Beardsley: Sexuality and Exoticism in Nineteenth-Century Print Culture. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2006.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Colligan, Colette. A Publisher’s Paradise: Expatriate Literary Culture in Paris, 1890–1960. Boston: University of Massachusetts Press, 2014.Google Scholar
Cox, Barry, Shirley, John, and Short, Martin. The Fall of Scotland Yard. Middlesex: Penguin, 1977.Google Scholar
Dean, Tim, Ruszczycky, Steven, and Squires, David D.. Porn Archives. London: Duke University Press, 2014.Google Scholar
Dunning, John H., and Lundan, Sarianna M.. Multinational Enterprises and the Global Economy. Chichester, UK: Edward Elgar, 2008.Google Scholar
Faist, Thomas, Fauser, Margit, and Reisenauer, Eveline. Transnational Migration. Chichester, UK: Wiley, 2013.Google Scholar
Ferris, Paul. Sex and the British. London: Michael Joseph, 1993.Google Scholar
Gertzman, Jay A. Bookleggers and Smuthounds: The Trade in Erotica, 1920–1940. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1999.Google Scholar
Gorfinkel, Elena. Lewd Looks. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2017.Google Scholar
Hammersley, Martin, and Atkinson, Paul. Ethnography: Principles in Practice. London: Routledge, 2007.Google Scholar
Hebditch, David, and Anning, Nick. Porn Gold: Inside the Pornography Business. London: Faber and Faber, 1988.Google Scholar
Heineman, Elizabeth. Before Porn Was Legal: The Erotic Empire of Beate Uhse. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2011.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Killick, Mark. The Sultan of Sleaze: The Story of David Sullivan’s Sex and Media Empire. London: Penguin, 1994.Google Scholar
Kiwan, Nadia, and Meinhof, Ulrike Hanna. Cultural Globalization and Music: African Artists in Transnational Networks. Basingstoke, UK: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kuhn, Annette. Everyday Magic: Cinema and Cultural Memory. London: IB Tauris, 2002.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kutchinsky, Berl, and Snare, Annika. Law, Pornography and Crime: The Danish Experience. Oslo: Pax Forlag, 1999.Google Scholar
Larsson, Mariah. The Swedish Porn Scene: Exhibition Contexts, 8mm Pornography and the Sex Film. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2016.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mort, Frank. Capital Affairs: London and the Making of the Permissive Society. London: Yale University Press, 2010.Google Scholar
O’Toole, Laurence. Pornocopia. London: Serpents Tail, 1999.Google Scholar
Petley, Julian. Film and Video Censorship in Contemporary Britain. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2011.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rawle, Steven. Transnational Cinema. Basingstoke, UK: Palgrave Macmillan, 2017.Google Scholar
Reichel, Philip, and Albanese, Jay. Handbook of Transnational Crime and Justice. London: Sage, 2013.Google Scholar
Robertson, Geoffrey. Obscenity. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1979.Google Scholar
Saunier, Pierre-Yves. Transnational History. Basingstoke, UK: Palgrave Macmillan, 2013.Google Scholar
Shane, Scott A. The Illusions of Entrepreneurship. London: Yale University Press, 2008.Google Scholar
Simpson, A. W. B. Pornography & Politics: The Williams Committee in Retrospect. Exeter, UK: Pergamon, 1983Google Scholar
Spicer, Andrew, and McKenna, A. T.. The Man Who Got Carter. London: Bloomsbury Publishing, 2013.Google Scholar
Stoops, Jamie. The Thorny Path. Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2018.Google Scholar
Strub, Whitney. Perversion for Profit: The Politics of Pornography and the Rise of the New Right. New York: Columbia University Press, 2011.Google Scholar
Tachou, Frédéric. Et le sexe entra dans la modernité: photographie «obscéne» et cinéma pornographique primitif, aux origines d’une industrie. Paris: Klincksieck, 2013.Google Scholar
Tate, Tim. Child Pornography: An Investigation. London: Trafalgar Square, 1990.Google Scholar
Tomkinson, Martin. The Pornbrokers: The Rise of the Soho Sex Barons. London: Virgin, 1982.Google Scholar
Williams, Colin. The Hidden Enterprise Culture: Entrepreneurship in the Underground Economy. Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar, 2006.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Williams, Linda. Hard Core: Power, Pleasure, and the Frenzy of the Visible. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1989.Google Scholar
Arnberg, Klara. “Under the Counter, Under the Radar? The Business and Regulation of the Pornographic Press in Sweden 1950–1971.” Enterprise & Society 13, no. 2 (2012): 350377.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Arnberg, Klara. “Before the Scandinavian ‘Porn Wave’: The Business and Regulations of Magazines Considered Obscene in Sweden, 1910–1950.” Porn Studies 4, no. 1 (2017): 422.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bailetti, Eduardo. “Transnational Entrepreneurship: Distinctive Features and a New Definition.” Technology Innovation Management Review 8, no. 9 (2018): 2838.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barnett, Vincent L.‘The Most Profitable Film Ever Made’: Deep Throat (1972), Organized Crime, and the $600 Million Gross.” Porn Studies 5, no. 2 (2018): 131151.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Basu, Gautam. “The Role of Transnational Smuggling Operations in Illicit Supply Chains.” Journal of Transportation Security 6, no. 4 (2013): 315328.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beresford, Sarah. “Obscene Performative Pornography: R v Peacock (2012) and the Legal Construction of Same-Sex and Gendered Identities in the United Kingdom.” Porn Studies 1, no. 4 (2014): 378–90.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Biasin, Enrico, and Zecca, Federico. “Introduction: Inside Gonzo Porn.” Porn Studies 3, no. 4 (2016): 332336.Google Scholar
Callwood, Dan. “Anxiety and Desire in France’s Gay Pornographic Film Boom, 1974–1983.” Journal of the History of Sexuality 26, no. 1 (2017): 2652.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cannatelli, Benedetto Lorenzo, Smith, Brett Richard, and Sydow, Alisa. “Entrepreneurship in the Controversial Economy: Toward a Research Agenda.” Journal of Business Ethics 155, no. 3 (2019): 837851.Google Scholar
Carter, Oliver. “Original Climax Films: Historicizing the British Hardcore Pornography Film Business.” Porn Studies 5, no. 4 (2018): 411425.Google Scholar
Cocks, Harry. “Conspiracy to Corrupt Public Morals and the ‘Unlawful’ Status of Homosexuality in Britain After 1967.” Social History 41, no. 3 (2016): 267284.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cocks, Harry. “‘The Social Picture of Our Own Times’: Reading Obscene Magazines in Mid-Twentieth-Century Britain.” Twentieth Century British History 27, no. 2 (2016): 171194.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coopersmith, Jonathan. “Pornography, Technology and Progress.” Icon 4 (1998): 94125.Google Scholar
Hekma, Gert. “A Radical Break with a Puritanical Past: The Dutch Case.” In Sexual Revolutions, edited by Hekma, Gert and Giami, Alain, 6080. London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2014.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hunter, I. Q.Naughty Realism: The Britishness of British Hardcore.” Journal of British Cinema and Television 11, nos. 2–3 (2014): 152171.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hutchinson, Terry. “Doctrinal Research: Researching the Jury.” In Research Methods in Law, edited by Watkins, Dawn, and Burton, Mandy, 839. London: Routledge, 2013.Google Scholar
Lan, Tu, and Zhu, Shengjun. “Chinese Apparel Value Chains in Europe: Low-End Fast Fashion, Regionalization, and Transnational Entrepreneurship in Prato, Italy.” Eurasian Geography and Economics 55, no. 2 (2014): 156–74.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Larsson, Mariah. “A National/Transnational Genre: Pornography in Transition.” In Nordic Genre Film: Small Nation Film Cultures in the Global Marketplace, edited by Gustafsson, Tommy and Kääpä, Pietari, 217229. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2015.Google Scholar
Larsson, Mariah. “Oh Paris! The Journeys of Lasse Braun’s 8mm Pornography.” Journal of Cinema and Media Studies 58, no. 1 (2018): 158163.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Leeson, Peter T., and Coyne, Christopher J.. “The Plight of Underdeveloped Countries: Institutions and the Direction of Entrepreneurial Activity with Evidence from Romania.” Mercatus Center at George Mason University, 2004, accessed March 8, 2021, https://www.peterleeson.com/The_Plight_of_Underdeveloped_Countries--Coyne_and_Leeson.pdf.Google Scholar
Maina, Giovanna, and Zecca, Federico. “Turn on the Red Light: Notes on the Birth of Italian Pornography.” Porn Studies (2021): 125.Google Scholar
McClister, Chase G.Prohibition of Obscene Imports in the United Kingdom-a Violation of Article 36 of the Treaty Establishing the European Community.” Penn State International Law Review 13, no. 2 (1994): 329346.Google Scholar
Ojo, Sanya. “Ethnic Enclaves to Diaspora Entrepreneurs: A Critical Appraisal of Black British Africans’ Transnational Entrepreneurship in London.” Journal of African Business 13, no. 2 (2012): 145156.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Paasonen, Susanna. “Labors of Love: Netporn, Web 2.0 and the Meanings of Amateurism.” New Media & Society 12, no. 8 (2010): 12971312.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Paasonen, Susanna. “Blocked Access: When Pornographers Take Offence.” In Media and the Politics of Offence, edited by Graefer, Anne, 165–85. London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2019.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Perkins, Murray. “Pornography, Policing and Censorship.” In Policing Sex, edited by Johnson, Paul and Dalton, Derek, 8598. London: Routledge, 2012.Google Scholar
Schaefer, Eric. “Dirty Little Secrets: Scholars, Archivists and Dirty Movies.” Moving Image 5, no. 2 (2005): 79105.Google Scholar
Schaefer, Eric. “Plain Brown Wrapper.” In Looking Past the Screen: Case Studies in American Film History and Method, edited by Lewis, Jon, and Smoodin, Eric, 201226. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2007.Google Scholar
Schaefer, Eric. “‘I’ll Take Sweden’: The Shifting Discourse of the ‘Sexy Nation’ in Sexploitation Films.” In Sex Scene: Media and the Sexual Revolution, edited by Schaefer, Eric, 207234. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2014.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Serrano, M.Transnational Organized Crime and International Security: Business as Usual?” In Transnational Organized Crime & International Security: Business as Usual?, edited by Berdal, M. and Serrano, M., 1336. Boulder, CO: Lynne Rienner, 2002.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, Clarissa. “A Perfectly British Business: Stagnation, Continuities and Change on the Top Shelf.” In International Exposure: Perspectives on Modern Pornography 1800–2000, edited by Sigel, Lisa Z., 146172. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 2005.Google Scholar
Spindler, Gerald. “The Standardization of the Internet and the International Harmonization of Ecommerce.” In The Role of the EU in Transnational Legal Ordering, edited by Gamito, Marta Cantero and Micklitz, Hans W., 100114. Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar, 2020.Google Scholar
Thorsen, Isak. “Family Porn—the Zodiac Film: Popular Comedy with Hard-Core Sex.” Journal of Scandinavian Cinema 4, no. 3 (2014): 289304.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Webb, Justin W., Laszlo Tihanyi, R. Duane Ireland, and Sirmon, David G.. “You Say Illegal, I Say Legitimate: Entrepreneurship in the Informal Economy.” Academy of Management Review 34, no. 3 (2009): 492510.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Woozley, A. D.The Tendency to Deprave and Corrupt.” Law and Philosophy 1, no. 2 (1982): 217–38.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Inman, Phillip, and Davies, Rob. “Pound Falls to Lowest Level in Three Years as Brexit Clash Looms.” The Guardian, September 3, 2019. https://www.theguardian.com/business/2019/sep/03/pound-falls-lowest-level-three-years-brexit-election-sterling.Google Scholar
Love, Jenny. “Where to Go If You’re Feeling Blue.Experience 4, no. 3 (n.d.), 1213.Google Scholar
Shearsmith, Martin. “Mr Big’s Porn Boast Shame.The Daily Echo, May 15, 1995, 13.Google Scholar
National Archives, UK, Director of Public Prosecutions, DPP2/5759, Virgo, Wallace Harold and others: corruption offences between January 1, 1964, and October 24, 1972.Google Scholar
National Archives, UK, Director of Public Prosecutions, DPP2/5765, Virgo, Wallace Harold and others: corruption offences between January 1, 1964, and October 24, 1972.Google Scholar
National Archives, UK, Director of Public Prosecutions, DPP2/5778, Virgo, Wallace Harold and others: corruption offences between January 1, 1964, and October 24, 1972.Google Scholar
Attorney General’s Reference (No. 5 of 1980) [1980] 3 All ER 816.Google Scholar
R. v. Holloway [1982].Google Scholar
R. v Waterfield (David) [1975] 1 W.L.R. 711.Google Scholar
Birmingham Post Google Scholar
Daily Mail Google Scholar
Daily Mirror Google Scholar
Forum: International Journal of Human Relations Google Scholar
The Journal Google Scholar
The People Google Scholar
The Times Google Scholar
Up Against the Law Google Scholar
Figure 0

Figure 1. David Waterfield, 1972. Author’s personal collection.

Figure 1

Figure 2. Advertisement for the EXXON Cinema Club. Author’s personal collection.

Figure 2

Figure 3. A selection of A. Evans and Your Choice advertisements. Courtesy of Pat Clark.

Figure 3

Figure 4. An example of an A. Evans catalog from 1988. Courtesy of Pat Clark.

Figure 4

Figure 5. A later Your Choice catalog from the early 1990s. Courtesy of Pat Clark.

Figure 5

Figure 6. Press picture of Pat Clark. Courtesy of Pat Clark.