Photographed By Rockie Nolan.
You don’t have to look further than this year’s AVN Awards, widely known as the “Oscars of porn,” for evidence of the trend. The field of nominees for “Best Taboo Relations Movie” was teeming with fauxcest films, and Keep It in the Family— a series of explicit vignettes directed by Jacky St. James that feature stepfamily members getting it on — come out on top. A glance at the industry charts of top adult sales and rentals reveals at least one fauxcest film on almost every list, boasting titles such as Forbidden Family Affairs and I Came Inside My Sister 3. As Jeff Dillon, vice president of business development at adult entertainment giant GameLink (NSFW), tells us, “‘Family roleplay,’ as we call it, is one of our top sellers for couples and women.”
Why the taboo fascination? It’s commonly believed that women like their stimulation supported by story, which is why they enjoy romance novels and erotica, while men, who prefer visual stimulation, watch porn. The reality is hardly so simple, but both producers and viewers state that fauxcest films provide the narrative context some women crave. As one anonymous Twitter user tells us via direct message, “Women like to see a reason [for sex]. We need to insert ourselves into it.” Dillon says that fauxcest is the seventh most popular category on GameLink, where roughly 35% of site users are female. “‘Women like the story,” he says. “[In fauxcest] you have to have some background to show who these people are and how they’re, well, related to each other.”
And it’s not just story development that St. James likes. “I really enjoy doing the taboo stuff,” she says, "because it’s a turn-on for me.” For many fans, fauxcest is enticing because the sexual practice it depicts is so deeply off-limits, both legally and culturally. As another anonymous Twitter user told us, “Personally, I think the appeal comes from being such a strong taboo.” Kelly Shibari, a porn performer and Penthouse model who also does PR for adult entertainment companies, agrees. “Porn’s job has always been to show what is taboo, but we’ve kind of gotten to the point where we’ve run out of taboos,” Shibari says. “Once something becomes mainstream, people don’t go looking for it in the underground anymore because it’s so easy to find. What’s left in the list of taboos that we can still legally do? Incest. It’s re-creation of taboo fantasy scenarios, which is what porn is.”
While the fauxcest trend in porn is relatively new, and modern bias against incest is strong — in the U.S., intimacy between children and parents, brothers and sisters, and grandchildren and grandparents is generally illegal — it’s worth remembering that humans have engaged in and been intrigued by incest for millennia. King Tut was far from the only figure in history to practice it: Throughout world history, royalty married close relatives to keep bloodlines pure, while today, entertainment outside of the porn world frequently plays on our fascination with incest. Think of the dynamic between Luke Skywalker and Princess Leia, the incestual undertones of Cruel Intentions, or the forbidden bond between Cersei and Jaime Lannister in George R. R. Martin’s wildly popular series A Song of Ice and Fire, the TV version of which St. James suspects helped popularize fauxcest (“I’m wondering if [the genre’s popularity is] related to the mainstream shows that are depicting it,” she muses). Despite and in fact because of its taboo nature, incest continues to captivate people, especially women, and this is changing the porn industry. “Research shows that it’s some of the best-selling content,” St. James concludes. “The truth of the matter is that people are buying it, whether they want to admit that it’s sexy or not.”
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