THE AUTHENTICITY MACHINE
A VERY BRIEF HISTORY OF CAMMING
Each site caters to a slightly different audience—JustForFans is primarily gay male modeling, ManyVids recently adopted a new queer-inclusive logo and a trans content portal called MVTrans, and so on—and every platform has a different set of users who tend to be brand loyal. Many of these sites run on subscription models, with fans signing up to consume their favorite models’ content. Everything about these subscriptions leans toward personalization and platinum-status accessibility: “premium” Snapchats, “exclusive” content, “private” shows.There are dozens of ways to find a cam model who’s to your personal taste. How you go about connecting with them depends on you—and what the models are willing to reveal about themselves.There’s a genuineness to haphazard, imperfect production, Ford explained, and maybe even a taboo—perhaps the sense that the person you’re watching isn’t a professional, but doing this for the love of the act, just for you.
WHEN THE CONNECTION CROSSES INTO IRL
BOUNDARIES, AND WHEN THEY’RE CROSSED
Another ManyVids model, Destiny Diaz, told me that her fans are usually very respectful, and that it’s extremely important to her to establish those boundaries, even from behind a webcam. “Some privacy is necessary, and we as adult entertainers are already offering a very intimate part of ourselves, so to have our personal privacy respected is important to us,” she said.Donahue said that fans will message him on Twitter for free exclusive pictures, or on Instagram, where he directs them back to Twitter, his preferred medium of choice for posting the content he wants to offer for free. “They’re like, ‘I don’t have Twitter, send them to me here…’ and I’m just like…Twitter is free. Sign the fuck up and jerk off to your heart’s content!”Something Darling has observed about her own work, which frequently focuses on an approachable girlfriend or girl-next-door experience, is how reticent many men are to connect with people in real life or go to therapy and divulge their sexual insecurities to a mental health professional.

FEELING LESS ALONE
“These sites have given me a sense of liberation and helped to lift my damaged, subtle fear of sex,” he said.Platforms that show something different and real—something that centers bodies and experiences outside the model pool of youth, thinness, and heterosexuality, ideals that production studios and porn monoliths have coveted for so long—will only increase in demand. That’s part of why cam shows where models just talk about their lives, or older gay men have intimate, loving sex, are so popular right now.It’s “sort of a basic human thing,” said the adult industry publicist Brian Scott Gross of the desire to have a true closeness to the people and things we’re interested in. “So if we have more and more of those experiences we’re gonna want more and more… We constantly want to be entertained, and we want it to be personal, we want to have a connection.”And that connection is, as Ford points out, rarely just about sex. “So the answer has to be on some level… What else is there? It’s the intimate connection with a person—which is not necessarily sexual, but it’s authentic. So much of sex work is not about sex, it’s just about making you feel like you’re not alone.”"You wouldn’t go to your accountant and start asking them if it’s OK to want to jerk off to feet. Those are just not the services they offer.”