![meth in the gay porn industry meth in the gay porn industry](https://attitude.co.uk/media/images/2020/02/316_Social_Real_Life_Jonathan_Agassi.jpg)
The video is an accurate document of what is happening all around me in London.
#METH IN THE GAY PORN INDUSTRY MOVIE#
He continued by saying that the movie "reflects my interests, not the company as a whole. On Treasure Island's blog about the film, Cole defended "Slammed" by saying he made the film without any guidance from TIM. SLAMMED is an honest and true record of lawless 21st century man-sex: Real, raw and straight to the point." TIM described the film as "London (redacted)-pigs party hard in Liam Cole's most extreme video yet. At the bare minimum Treasure Island should be condemned for not taking care of its models and fostering a fan base for 'addict porn'." Sword reader Vanilla Cream said that watching the film was "like watching 'Faces of Death' or a snuff film. The rest condemned it as disgusting and a step back for gays and stereotypes. Of the 50 comments the post has received, only one or two called the scene hot or sexy in any way.
![meth in the gay porn industry meth in the gay porn industry](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/M/MV5BZmNiYjQ0Y2ItY2IzYi00NmRmLWFlM2UtMGRmZjk5MzQ4M2UyXkEyXkFqcGdeQXVyNzU1NzE3NTg@._V1_.jpg)
Turns out, the website's parent company has a business agreement with the TIM to stream the studio's content on. Instead, the piece left it to the readers to comment on the safety of the film. Seeing the "is it safe question" had me thinking that the writer was going to be dissecting the video for what it is: a porn showing drug use. Gay porn news site, The Naked Sword first posed the question: "Is it safe?" Now Treasure Island Media (TIM) is taking all three and putting them into one in their new skin flick titled, "Slammed." The question that arises from this film is: is it socially or morally wrong for TIM and director Liam Cole to depict real people actually using crystal meth while having unprotected sex?