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'''Adam & Eve''' is a marketer of adult products that sells [[sex toys]] and produces [[pornographic film]]s, as well as funding non-profit [[social marketing]] organizations that address issues such as population growth, disease control and sex education in developing countries. In 2006 it was described by [[Reuters]] as one of the handful of studios that dominate the [[Pornography in the United States|U.S. porn industry]]. <ref name=tvnz>{{cite web |url=http://tvnz.co.nz/view/page/411423/646884 |title=Porn stars strut their stuff at awards |publisher=[[TVNZ]] |accessdate=2009-03-11}}</ref> The company is the largest [[mail-order]] distributor of [[condoms]], sex toys and pornographic films in the United States. <ref name=Reefer/> Founder [[Phil Harvey]] has been called "one of the most influential figures in the American [[sex industry]] today".<ref name=Reefer/> Its parent company, PHE Inc., is the largest private employer in [[Hillsborough, North Carolina]], where its headquarters are situated.<ref name=Reefer/>
'''Adam & Eve''' is a marketer of adult products that sells [[sex toys]] and produces [[pornographic film]]s, as well as funding non-profit [[social marketing]] organizations that address issues such as population growth, disease control and sex education in developing countries. In 2006 it was described by [[Reuters]] as one of the handful of studios that dominate the [[Pornography in the United States|U.S. porn industry]].<ref name=tvnz>{{cite web |url=http://tvnz.co.nz/view/page/411423/646884 |title=Porn stars strut their stuff at awards |publisher=[[TVNZ]] |accessdate=2009-03-11}}</ref> The company is the largest [[mail-order]] distributor of [[condoms]], sex toys and pornographic films in the United States.<ref name=Reefer/> Founder [[Phil Harvey]] has been called "one of the most influential figures in the American [[sex industry]] today".<ref name=Reefer/> Its parent company, PHE Inc., is the largest private employer in [[Hillsborough, North Carolina]], where its headquarters are situated.<ref name=Reefer/>


==Origins==
==Origins==
Adam & Eve was founded in 1970 by physician Tim Black and Phil Harvey as a mail-order catalog selling contraceptives through non-medical channels.<ref name=Reefer/>
Adam & Eve was founded in 1970 by physician Tim Black and Phil Harvey as a mail-order catalog selling contraceptives through non-medical channels.<ref name=Reefer/>


Harvey, having just returned from India as a part of the [[CARE (relief agency)|CARE]] pre-school feeding program, concluded that poor family planning was the source of many social problems. While still a graduate student at the [[University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill|University of North Carolina]]'s School of Public Health, Harvey and Black conceived Adam & Eve to fund a non-profit organization in hopes of using the profits to finance family-planning programs in developing countries,<ref name="mj">[http://www.motherjones.com/commentary/notebook/2002/11/ma_158_01.html Hard-Core Philanthropist, Mother Jones 2002]</ref>. With a Ford Foundation fellowship, the two men devised a plan to use social marketing in the U.S., and with university consent, they began writing witty ad copy ("What will you get her this Christmas -- pregnant?") <ref name="mj"/> and advertising condoms in the mail. After running ads in 300 of the largest U.S. college newspapers, the orders started and didn’t stop. Though selling condoms via the mail was in violation of the [[Comstock Act]], Harvey and Black knew the law was rarely enforced. Success ensued, and the men began to see a profit, stating, "The mail-order condom market was just sitting there waiting for somebody," recalls Harvey. "We'd sit down at the end of the week and pay our bills and I'd say, 'There seems to be some money leftover here.' That's about how much we knew about business. He also gives authors a chance to write for his videos." <ref name="mj"/>
Harvey, having just returned from India as a part of the [[CARE (relief agency)|CARE]] pre-school feeding program, concluded that poor family planning was the source of many social problems. While still a graduate student at the [[University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill|University of North Carolina]]'s School of Public Health, Harvey and Black conceived Adam & Eve to fund a non-profit organization in hopes of using the profits to finance family-planning programs in developing countries,.<ref name="mj">[http://www.motherjones.com/commentary/notebook/2002/11/ma_158_01.html Hard-Core Philanthropist, Mother Jones 2002]</ref> With a Ford Foundation fellowship, the two men devised a plan to use social marketing in the U.S., and with university consent, they began writing witty ad copy ("What will you get her this Christmas -- pregnant?") <ref name="mj"/> and advertising condoms in the mail. After running ads in 300 of the largest U.S. college newspapers, the orders started and didn’t stop. Though selling condoms via the mail was in violation of the [[Comstock Act]], Harvey and Black knew the law was rarely enforced. Success ensued, and the men began to see a profit, stating, "The mail-order condom market was just sitting there waiting for somebody," recalls Harvey. "We'd sit down at the end of the week and pay our bills and I'd say, 'There seems to be some money leftover here.' That's about how much we knew about business. He also gives authors a chance to write for his videos." <ref name="mj"/>


==Philanthropy==
==Philanthropy==
Line 42: Line 42:
{{main|Population Services International}}
{{main|Population Services International}}


With business generating more than enough revenue to cover costs, the partners wondered if the condom business could create enough of a profit to finance overseas social-marketing projects. If so, they would have the ability to bypass conventional donors and function with complete autonomy. With that, the men launched [[Population Services International]] (PSI), and by 1975 were conducting condom marketing programs in Bangladesh and Kenya. Though Harvey left his position as the director in the late 1970’s, PSI still sells birth control and health products in over 60 countries and is prominent in international [[family planning]].
With business generating more than enough revenue to cover costs, the partners wondered if the condom business could create enough of a profit to finance overseas social-marketing projects. If so, they would have the ability to bypass conventional donors and function with complete autonomy. With that, the men launched [[Population Services International]] (PSI), and by 1975 were conducting condom marketing programs in Bangladesh and Kenya. Though Harvey left his position as the director in the late 1970s, PSI still sells birth control and health products in over 60 countries and is prominent in international [[family planning]].


===DKT International===
===DKT International===
{{main|DKT International}}
{{main|DKT International}}


In the late 1970s, Harvey focused more on running Adam & Eve, but in 1989, he launched [[DKT International]] (DKT), an organization that promotes [[family planning]] and [[HIV]]/[[AIDS]] prevention in [[Africa]], [[Asia]], and [[Latin America]].<ref name=Reefer/><ref name="about dkt" /> Much of DKT's revenue comes from its sales of low-cost [[birth control|contraceptives]], but Adam & Eve also donates more than 25% of its profits to DKT.<ref name="about dkt">{{cite web|url=http://www.dktinternational.org/index.php?section=10|title=About DKT|publisher=DKT International|accessdate=2009-06-05}}</ref><ref name="about">{{cite web|url=http://www.adameve.com/t-company_info.aspx|title=About Adam & Eve (adult content)|publisher=Adam & Eve|accessdate=2009-06-05}}</ref> While DKT's biggest programs draw funding from government agencies and foundations, its private funding allows it to be a more innovative and agile participant in its discipline.<ref name="mother jones" /> DKT's [[social marketing]] strategies have included advertising, creating location-specific brands, working with local social networks and militaries, and targeting high-risk groups.<ref name="mother jones">{{cite news|url=http://www.motherjones.com/commentary/notebook/2002/11/ma_158_01.html|title=Hard-Core Philanthropist|last=Cheshes|first=Jay|date=2002|work=[[Mother Jones (magazine)|Mother Jones]]|archiveurl=http://web.archive.org/web/20080306201159/http://www.motherjones.com/commentary/notebook/2002/11/ma_158_01.html|archivedate=2008-03-06|accessdate=June 05, 2009}}</ref><ref name="social marketing">{{cite web|url=http://www.dktinternational.org/index.php?section=11|title=How Social Marketing Changes Lives|publisher=DKT International|accessdate=2009-06-05}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2007/nov/02/aids.ethiopia|title=Coffee condoms promote safe sex in Ethiopia|last=Batty|first=David|date=November 2, 2007|work=[[The Guardian]]|accessdate=June 5, 2009}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|title=Selling Birth Control to India's Poor: Medicine Men Market an Array Of Contraceptives|last=Jordon|first=Miriam|date=September 21, 1999|work=[[The Wall Street Journal]]}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2002/11/24/MN110776.DTL|title=AIDS in Asia: The Continent's Growing Crisis|last=Schnayerson|first=Ben|date=November 24, 2002|work=[[San Francisco Chronicle]]|accessdate=June 5, 2009}}</ref>
In the late 1970s, Harvey focused more on running Adam & Eve, but in 1989, he launched [[DKT International]] (DKT), an organization that promotes [[family planning]] and [[HIV]]/[[AIDS]] prevention in [[Africa]], [[Asia]], and [[Latin America]].<ref name=Reefer/><ref name="about dkt" /> Much of DKT's revenue comes from its sales of low-cost [[birth control|contraceptives]], but Adam & Eve also donates more than 25% of its profits to DKT.<ref name="about dkt">{{cite web|url=http://www.dktinternational.org/index.php?section=10|title=About DKT|publisher=DKT International|accessdate=2009-06-05}}</ref><ref name="about">{{cite web|url=http://www.adameve.com/t-company_info.aspx|title=About Adam & Eve (adult content)|publisher=Adam & Eve|accessdate=2009-06-05}}</ref> While DKT's biggest programs draw funding from government agencies and foundations, its private funding allows it to be a more innovative and agile participant in its discipline.<ref name="mother jones" /> DKT's [[social marketing]] strategies have included advertising, creating location-specific brands, working with local social networks and militaries, and targeting high-risk groups.<ref name="mother jones">{{cite news|url=http://www.motherjones.com/commentary/notebook/2002/11/ma_158_01.html|title=Hard-Core Philanthropist|last=Cheshes|first=Jay|year=2002|work=[[Mother Jones (magazine)|Mother Jones]]|archiveurl=http://web.archive.org/web/20080306201159/http://www.motherjones.com/commentary/notebook/2002/11/ma_158_01.html|archivedate=2008-03-06|accessdate=June 5, 2009}}</ref><ref name="social marketing">{{cite web|url=http://www.dktinternational.org/index.php?section=11|title=How Social Marketing Changes Lives|publisher=DKT International|accessdate=2009-06-05}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2007/nov/02/aids.ethiopia|title=Coffee condoms promote safe sex in Ethiopia|last=Batty|first=David|date=November 2, 2007|work=[[The Guardian]]|accessdate=June 5, 2009}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|title=Selling Birth Control to India's Poor: Medicine Men Market an Array Of Contraceptives|last=Jordon|first=Miriam|date=September 21, 1999|work=[[The Wall Street Journal]]}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2002/11/24/MN110776.DTL|title=AIDS in Asia: The Continent's Growing Crisis|last=Schnayerson|first=Ben|date=November 24, 2002|work=[[San Francisco Chronicle]]|accessdate=June 5, 2009}}</ref>


==American Cancer Society==
==American Cancer Society==
Line 56: Line 56:
==Pornographic film studio==
==Pornographic film studio==
The major American [[List of pornographic movie studios|pornographic film studios]] promote their latest releases to, and seek funds for new productions from the company, because of its huge buying power.<ref name=Reefer/> In 2009 the company donated funds to the [[Free Speech Coalition]] <ref>[http://www.xbiz.com/news/news_piece.php?id=106174 www.[[XBIZ]].com]</ref> Its contract stars to date have included Juli Ashton, Mari Possa, Austyn Moore, Carmen Luvana, Sophia Lynn, Bree Olson, Kayden Kross, Alexis Ford, and Teagan Presley.<ref name="pornstars">[http://broken-headboards.com/pornstars http://broken-headboards.com]</ref>
The major American [[List of pornographic movie studios|pornographic film studios]] promote their latest releases to, and seek funds for new productions from the company, because of its huge buying power.<ref name=Reefer/> In 2009 the company donated funds to the [[Free Speech Coalition]] <ref>[http://www.xbiz.com/news/news_piece.php?id=106174 www.[[XBIZ]].com]</ref> Its contract stars to date have included Juli Ashton, Mari Possa, Austyn Moore, Carmen Luvana, Sophia Lynn, Bree Olson, Kayden Kross, Alexis Ford, and Teagan Presley.<ref name="pornstars">[http://broken-headboards.com/pornstars http://broken-headboards.com]</ref>

===Awards===
===Awards===
The following is a selection of awards Adam & Eve and its production company have won:
The following is a selection of awards Adam & Eve and its production company have won:
Line 67: Line 68:
*2008 Xbiz Award - 'Best Online Retailer - AdamEve.com' <ref name=XBIZ08>{{cite web | url=http://www.xbizawards.com/winners.php | title=2008 Xbiz Awards |publisher=[[Xbiz (magazine)|Xbiz]] |accessdate=2010-09-27}}</ref>
*2008 Xbiz Award - 'Best Online Retailer - AdamEve.com' <ref name=XBIZ08>{{cite web | url=http://www.xbizawards.com/winners.php | title=2008 Xbiz Awards |publisher=[[Xbiz (magazine)|Xbiz]] |accessdate=2010-09-27}}</ref>
*2009 AVN Award - 'Best Sex Comedy' for ''Not Bewitched XXX'' <ref name=AVN09>{{cite web |url=http://www.avnawards.com/index.php?content=winners09 |title=THE 2009 AVN AWARDS WINNERS |publisher=[[AVN (magazine)|AVN]] |accessdate=2009-03-07}}</ref>
*2009 AVN Award - 'Best Sex Comedy' for ''Not Bewitched XXX'' <ref name=AVN09>{{cite web |url=http://www.avnawards.com/index.php?content=winners09 |title=THE 2009 AVN AWARDS WINNERS |publisher=[[AVN (magazine)|AVN]] |accessdate=2009-03-07}}</ref>
*2009 AVN Award - 'Best Online Marketing Campaign - Individual Project' for 'Roller Dollz' <ref name=AVN09>{{cite web |url=http://avnawards.avn.com/winners/2009/ |title=THE 2009 AVN AWARDS WINNERS |publisher=[[AVN (magazine)|AVN]] |accessdate=2010-27-09}}</ref>
*2009 AVN Award - 'Best Online Marketing Campaign - Individual Project' for 'Roller Dollz' <ref name=AVN09>{{cite web |url=http://avnawards.avn.com/winners/2009/ |title=THE 2009 AVN AWARDS WINNERS |publisher=[[AVN (magazine)|AVN]] |accessdate=2010-09-27}}</ref>
*2009 AVN Award - 'Best Original Song' for 'Dark City' <ref name=AVN09>{{cite web |url=http://avnawards.avn.com/winners/2009/ |title=THE 2009 AVN AWARDS WINNERS |publisher=[[AVN (magazine)|AVN]] |accessdate=2010-27-09}}</ref>
*2009 AVN Award - 'Best Original Song' for 'Dark City' <ref name="AVN09"/>
*2010 AVN Award - 'Best All-Girl Group Sex Scene' for 'Deviance'<ref name=AVN10>{{cite web |url=http://avnawards.avn.com/winners/ |title=THE 2010 AVN AWARDS WINNERS |publisher=[[AVN (magazine)|AVN]] |accessdate=2010-09-27}}</ref>
*2010 AVN Award - 'Best All-Girl Group Sex Scene' for 'Deviance'<ref name=AVN10>{{cite web |url=http://avnawards.avn.com/winners/ |title=THE 2010 AVN AWARDS WINNERS |publisher=[[AVN (magazine)|AVN]] |accessdate=2010-27-09}}</ref>
*2010 AVN Award - 'Best All-Girl Three-Way Sex Scene' for 'The 8th Day'<ref name="AVN10"/>
*2010 AVN Award - 'Best All-Girl Three-Way Sex Scene' for 'The 8th Day'<ref name=AVN10>{{cite web |url=http://avnawards.avn.com/winners/ |title=THE 2010 AVN AWARDS WINNERS |publisher=[[AVN (magazine)|AVN]] |accessdate=2010-27-09}}</ref>
*2010 AVN Award - 'Best DVD Extras' for 'The 8th Day'<ref name="AVN10"/>
*2010 AVN Award - 'Best DVD Extras' for 'The 8th Day'<ref name=AVN10>{{cite web |url=http://avnawards.avn.com/winners/ |title=THE 2010 AVN AWARDS WINNERS |publisher=[[AVN (magazine)|AVN]] |accessdate=2010-27-09}}</ref>
*2010 AVN Award - 'Best Editing' for 'The 8th Day'<ref name="AVN10"/>
*2010 AVN Award - 'Best High End All-Sex Release' for 'Deviance'<ref name="AVN10"/>
*2010 AVN Award - 'Best Editing' for 'The 8th Day'<ref name=AVN10>{{cite web |url=http://avnawards.avn.com/winners/ |title=THE 2010 AVN AWARDS WINNERS |publisher=[[AVN (magazine)|AVN]] |accessdate=2010-27-09}}</ref>
*2010 AVN Award - 'Best High End All-Sex Release' for 'Deviance'<ref name=AVN10>{{cite web |url=http://avnawards.avn.com/winners/ |title=THE 2010 AVN AWARDS WINNERS |publisher=[[AVN (magazine)|AVN]] |accessdate=2010-27-09}}</ref>
*2010 AVN Award - 'Best On-Line Marketing Campaign, Individual Project' for 'The 8th Day'<ref name="AVN10"/>
*2010 AVN Award - 'Best On-Line Marketing Campaign, Individual Project' for 'The 8th Day'<ref name=AVN10>{{cite web |url=http://avnawards.avn.com/winners/ |title=THE 2010 AVN AWARDS WINNERS |publisher=[[AVN (magazine)|AVN]] |accessdate=2010-27-09}}</ref>
*2010 AVN Award - 'Best Original Song' for 'The Crack Pack'<ref name="AVN10"/>
*2010 AVN Award - 'Best Original Song' for 'The Crack Pack'<ref name=AVN10>{{cite web |url=http://avnawards.avn.com/winners/ |title=THE 2010 AVN AWARDS WINNERS |publisher=[[AVN (magazine)|AVN]] |accessdate=2010-27-09}}</ref>
*2010 AVN Award - 'Best Packaging Innovation' for 'The 8th Day'<ref name="AVN10"/>
*2010 AVN Award - 'Best Packaging Innovation' for 'The 8th Day'<ref name=AVN10>{{cite web |url=http://avnawards.avn.com/winners/ |title=THE 2010 AVN AWARDS WINNERS |publisher=[[AVN (magazine)|AVN]] |accessdate=2010-27-09}}</ref>
*2010 AVN Award - 'Best Sex Comedy' for 'Not Airplane XXX: Flight Attendants'<ref name="AVN10"/>
*2010 AVN Award - 'Best Sex Comedy' for 'Not Airplane XXX: Flight Attendants'<ref name=AVN10>{{cite web |url=http://avnawards.avn.com/winners/ |title=THE 2010 AVN AWARDS WINNERS |publisher=[[AVN (magazine)|AVN]] |accessdate=2010-27-09}}</ref>
*2010 AVN Award - 'Best Special Effects' for 'The 8th Day'<ref name="AVN10"/>
*2010 AVN Award - 'Best Special Effects' for 'The 8th Day'<ref name=AVN10>{{cite web |url=http://avnawards.avn.com/winners/ |title=THE 2010 AVN AWARDS WINNERS |publisher=[[AVN (magazine)|AVN]] |accessdate=2010-27-09}}</ref>
*2010 AVN Award - 'Best Video Feature' for 'The 8th Day'<ref name="AVN10"/>
*2010 AVN Award - 'Best Video Feature' for 'The 8th Day'<ref name=AVN10>{{cite web |url=http://avnawards.avn.com/winners/ |title=THE 2010 AVN AWARDS WINNERS |publisher=[[AVN (magazine)|AVN]] |accessdate=2010-27-09}}</ref>
*2010 AVN Award - 'Best Videography' for 'The 8th Day'<ref name="AVN10"/>
*2010 AVN O Award - 'Lifetime Achievement' for Adam & Eve<ref name="AVN10"/>
*2010 AVN Award - 'Best Videography' for 'The 8th Day'<ref name=AVN10>{{cite web |url=http://avnawards.avn.com/winners/ |title=THE 2010 AVN AWARDS WINNERS |publisher=[[AVN (magazine)|AVN]] |accessdate=2010-27-09}}</ref>
*2010 AVN O Award - 'Lifetime Achievement' for Adam & Eve<ref name=AVN10>{{cite web |url=http://avnawards.avn.com/winners/ |title=THE 2010 AVN AWARDS WINNERS |publisher=[[AVN (magazine)|AVN]] |accessdate=2010-27-09}}</ref>


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 08:38, 24 December 2010

Adam & Eve
Company typePrivate
IndustrySex industry
FoundedNorth Carolina, U.S. (1970)
FounderPhil Harvey & Tim Black
Headquarters,
ProductsSex toys, Pornographic films, condoms
ParentPHE, Inc.
WebsiteAdamEve.com
Footnotes / references
[1]

Adam & Eve is a marketer of adult products that sells sex toys and produces pornographic films, as well as funding non-profit social marketing organizations that address issues such as population growth, disease control and sex education in developing countries. In 2006 it was described by Reuters as one of the handful of studios that dominate the U.S. porn industry.[2] The company is the largest mail-order distributor of condoms, sex toys and pornographic films in the United States.[1] Founder Phil Harvey has been called "one of the most influential figures in the American sex industry today".[1] Its parent company, PHE Inc., is the largest private employer in Hillsborough, North Carolina, where its headquarters are situated.[1]

Origins

Adam & Eve was founded in 1970 by physician Tim Black and Phil Harvey as a mail-order catalog selling contraceptives through non-medical channels.[1]

Harvey, having just returned from India as a part of the CARE pre-school feeding program, concluded that poor family planning was the source of many social problems. While still a graduate student at the University of North Carolina's School of Public Health, Harvey and Black conceived Adam & Eve to fund a non-profit organization in hopes of using the profits to finance family-planning programs in developing countries,.[3] With a Ford Foundation fellowship, the two men devised a plan to use social marketing in the U.S., and with university consent, they began writing witty ad copy ("What will you get her this Christmas -- pregnant?") [3] and advertising condoms in the mail. After running ads in 300 of the largest U.S. college newspapers, the orders started and didn’t stop. Though selling condoms via the mail was in violation of the Comstock Act, Harvey and Black knew the law was rarely enforced. Success ensued, and the men began to see a profit, stating, "The mail-order condom market was just sitting there waiting for somebody," recalls Harvey. "We'd sit down at the end of the week and pay our bills and I'd say, 'There seems to be some money leftover here.' That's about how much we knew about business. He also gives authors a chance to write for his videos." [3]

Philanthropy

Population Services International

With business generating more than enough revenue to cover costs, the partners wondered if the condom business could create enough of a profit to finance overseas social-marketing projects. If so, they would have the ability to bypass conventional donors and function with complete autonomy. With that, the men launched Population Services International (PSI), and by 1975 were conducting condom marketing programs in Bangladesh and Kenya. Though Harvey left his position as the director in the late 1970s, PSI still sells birth control and health products in over 60 countries and is prominent in international family planning.

DKT International

In the late 1970s, Harvey focused more on running Adam & Eve, but in 1989, he launched DKT International (DKT), an organization that promotes family planning and HIV/AIDS prevention in Africa, Asia, and Latin America.[1][4] Much of DKT's revenue comes from its sales of low-cost contraceptives, but Adam & Eve also donates more than 25% of its profits to DKT.[4][5] While DKT's biggest programs draw funding from government agencies and foundations, its private funding allows it to be a more innovative and agile participant in its discipline.[6] DKT's social marketing strategies have included advertising, creating location-specific brands, working with local social networks and militaries, and targeting high-risk groups.[6][7][8][9][10]

American Cancer Society

Adam & Eve is currently giving donations to the American Cancer Society as well.

Pornographic film studio

The major American pornographic film studios promote their latest releases to, and seek funds for new productions from the company, because of its huge buying power.[1] In 2009 the company donated funds to the Free Speech Coalition [11] Its contract stars to date have included Juli Ashton, Mari Possa, Austyn Moore, Carmen Luvana, Sophia Lynn, Bree Olson, Kayden Kross, Alexis Ford, and Teagan Presley.[12]

Awards

The following is a selection of awards Adam & Eve and its production company have won:

  • 2003 AVN Award - 'Best Specialty Release, Other Genre' for Internal Affairs 5 [13]
  • 2003 AVN award - 'Best Continuing Video Series' for Naked Hollywood[13]
  • 2004 AVN Award - 'Best Video Feature' for Rawhide [13]
  • 2005 AVN Award - 'Best Specialty Release - Spanking' for Nina Hartley's Guide to Spanking [13]
  • 2006 AVN Award - 'Best DVD' for Pirates [13]
  • 2006 AVN Award - 'Best Video Feature' for Pirates [13]
  • 2008 AVN Award - 'Top Selling Title of the Year – 2007' for Pirates [14]
  • 2008 Xbiz Award - 'Best Online Retailer - AdamEve.com' [15]
  • 2009 AVN Award - 'Best Sex Comedy' for Not Bewitched XXX [16]
  • 2009 AVN Award - 'Best Online Marketing Campaign - Individual Project' for 'Roller Dollz' [16]
  • 2009 AVN Award - 'Best Original Song' for 'Dark City' [16]
  • 2010 AVN Award - 'Best All-Girl Group Sex Scene' for 'Deviance'[17]
  • 2010 AVN Award - 'Best All-Girl Three-Way Sex Scene' for 'The 8th Day'[17]
  • 2010 AVN Award - 'Best DVD Extras' for 'The 8th Day'[17]
  • 2010 AVN Award - 'Best Editing' for 'The 8th Day'[17]
  • 2010 AVN Award - 'Best High End All-Sex Release' for 'Deviance'[17]
  • 2010 AVN Award - 'Best On-Line Marketing Campaign, Individual Project' for 'The 8th Day'[17]
  • 2010 AVN Award - 'Best Original Song' for 'The Crack Pack'[17]
  • 2010 AVN Award - 'Best Packaging Innovation' for 'The 8th Day'[17]
  • 2010 AVN Award - 'Best Sex Comedy' for 'Not Airplane XXX: Flight Attendants'[17]
  • 2010 AVN Award - 'Best Special Effects' for 'The 8th Day'[17]
  • 2010 AVN Award - 'Best Video Feature' for 'The 8th Day'[17]
  • 2010 AVN Award - 'Best Videography' for 'The 8th Day'[17]
  • 2010 AVN O Award - 'Lifetime Achievement' for Adam & Eve[17]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Eric Schlosser (2004). Reefer madness: sex, drugs, and cheap labor in the American black market. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. ISBN 0618446702.
  2. ^ "Porn stars strut their stuff at awards". TVNZ. Retrieved 2009-03-11.
  3. ^ a b c Hard-Core Philanthropist, Mother Jones 2002
  4. ^ a b "About DKT". DKT International. Retrieved 2009-06-05.
  5. ^ "About Adam & Eve (adult content)". Adam & Eve. Retrieved 2009-06-05.
  6. ^ a b Cheshes, Jay (2002). "Hard-Core Philanthropist". Mother Jones. Archived from the original on 2008-03-06. Retrieved June 5, 2009.
  7. ^ "How Social Marketing Changes Lives". DKT International. Retrieved 2009-06-05.
  8. ^ Batty, David (November 2, 2007). "Coffee condoms promote safe sex in Ethiopia". The Guardian. Retrieved June 5, 2009.
  9. ^ Jordon, Miriam (September 21, 1999). "Selling Birth Control to India's Poor: Medicine Men Market an Array Of Contraceptives". The Wall Street Journal.
  10. ^ Schnayerson, Ben (November 24, 2002). "AIDS in Asia: The Continent's Growing Crisis". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved June 5, 2009.
  11. ^ www.XBIZ.com
  12. ^ http://broken-headboards.com
  13. ^ a b c d e f "AVN AWARDS PAST WINNERS". AVN. Retrieved 2009-03-13.
  14. ^ "2008 AVN AWARDS WINNERS ANNOUNCED". AVN. Retrieved 2009-03-12.
  15. ^ "2008 Xbiz Awards". Xbiz. Retrieved 2010-09-27.
  16. ^ a b c "THE 2009 AVN AWARDS WINNERS". AVN. Retrieved 2009-03-07. Cite error: The named reference "AVN09" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  17. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "THE 2010 AVN AWARDS WINNERS". AVN. Retrieved 2010-09-27.