H68785 wrote:I'd love to get into this as i find the videos fascinating as well as arousing but sadly I don't feel I'd know how to get working with a company like this, or even creating my own.
So firstly, ditch the arousing part. Once you step over the line to being a producer, your priorities and perspectives change. This isn’t just for the fact that now you are representing a brand but rather now you are responsible for the well being and safety of the people you work with. Is it fun? Absolutely! We wouldn’t be producing if it wasn’t but chances are likely your head will be far too buried in the nuts and bolts of a shoot (and there are many).
For instance, one fan has exclaimed that my POV shots for the oil scenes we do are by far the hottest and that I must have a hard time concentrating when in fact, I am literally paying very little attention to what the ladies are doing in that regard. I have one eye on my camera asst, my other eye on framing my shot and making sure I am not in frame of Camera 3, I have a bottle of oil that I am doing this “Crane form Kung Fu” deal with because I don’t want my paws in the frame of the POV camera and I got my timestamp on my monitor so I can track how much time has elapsed for the scene. Trust me, you will be many things as a producer; aroused isn’t one of them.
The love and excitement truly comes from the reactions of people going off on the finished product you created. It’s a humbling and amazing experience and yes, it is like a drug. You look at the content producers before have made with a different lens (pun intended) and a newfound appreciation of the work they put into it.
As for how? Much of who you see on here have some form of education behind the camera before they started. It’s important to understand the basic vocabulary behind operating a camera, different angles, leading shots, etc. You don’t need to be George Lucas but you are expected to have all the boxes checked (good exposure, composition, steady shot, accurate color/white balance etc). Youtube has some good basic fundamentals to follow in this aspect as well as various editing tutorials if you are new.
I do recommend working under another fetish producer/photographer for a few to get acclimated to how a set should be ran. Preferably one who is reputable, respected and knows their way around a set. This is critical. On set behavior will be the difference between shooting with a model and shooting with a model only once because you said something off putting.
Beyond that, your biggest hurdle is really a location. The three things to look at are:
-Is it Safe
-Is it Legal
-Is it a nuisance
First one is pretty self explanatory. Make sure who you shoot with isn’t gonna get hurt trying to accomplish this shoot. Warm showers are also advised. Legal? Make sure you can shoot there. If it is not your property, ask permission first or rent it if possible. Nuisance? Make sure you aren’t gonna get the cops called on you or more so, have bystanders stumble across your shoot. Fred has digs available to rent if none of these things are available.
The next is finding a victi-oops…model to shoot with but that is the easiest part of all. LOL