Hey Chris:

Hopefully I have a direction or two for you.

This is my first post to the group. I have been lurking for quite some
time. Hopefully, it won't brand me as a pervert.:-)

First:

There is a mainstream book from O'Reilly (the folks with a line
drawing of an animal on every cover) with an entire chapter devoted to
marketing adult/mature content on the internet.  The book is titled:

Google Advertising Tools 

I doubt you will be doing much of your advertising on Google, but
that's the title of the book. I believe its chapter six. I was stunned
the O'Reilly folks, usually purveyors of stuff way too geeked out for
me, would be so literate about adult internet marketing. But its true.

Second:

Before you buy the book, here are a few websites that might also
provide some information:

http://www.Adult.tophosts.com  =  Adult web hosting
http://www.Cozyacademy.com = Touted as the original free school for
adult web masterism
http://www.Adultchamber.com = Adult webmaster commerce & resource center

Yep, my curiousity was piqued enough to write them down. Apparently
there is this whole parallel universe of adult oriented internet
marketing avenues existing right under our noses.

Hope this was helpful and didn't offend anyone.

Rob


--- In videoblogging@yahoogroups.com, "Chris" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> What are some best practices for monetizing videos with mature
> content? And by that I don't mean porn, I mean something that, in
> terms of propriety, falls somewhere between French Maid TV and a Kevin
> Smith film (leaning more toward the former most of the time, but
> occasionally careening toward the latter).
> 
> I know that's going to cut out certain revenue partners whose TOS's
> preclude such things, such as - I'm guessing - AdSense.
> 
> So my question, I guess, is can anybody name any revenue partners that
> don't care if your content is a little racy or risque? Especially now
> that Revver is likely going bye-bye...
> 
> Chris
>


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