TopBucks Signs More Leading Video Producers for BestMovies.com

Rev share experts TopBucks.com announced today they have signed a slew of the industry's most popular production houses to provide content for its new video-on-demand site, BestMovies.com.

The latest additions to the list include 150 titles from New Sensations, 20 titles from Digital Sin and 100 from Rain Video. These new production houses add to the already impressive selection of videos offered by on BestMovies.com from VCA, Larry Flynt Productions, Private Video, Legend, Sin City, Kbeech, Heatwave and Red Light District Video, turning BestMovies.com into a massive storehouse for adult videos on the Web.

BestMovies.com offers a token-based pay-per-view system where viewers can access rates as low as nine cents per minute. The site currently houses over 2000 titles and adds hundreds of new ones each month.

"From a user end, the thing makes BestMovies unique is the presence of exclusive 'reality' content from our Websites, including milfseeker.com, bangboat.com and the rest of our line of reality sites," TopBucks.com Director of Public Relations Quentin Boyer told AVN Online.com. "On the webmaster side, BestMovies is unique in that we are paying out on a per signup basis for referred customers; other pay per view sites pay a percentage of each sale. Experienced webmasters know that, generally speaking, they stand to make a lot more money on per signup than on a recurring revenue share basis."

BestMovies is part of a larger effort by TopBucks to diversify their offerings by expanding beyond subscription adult sites. TopBucks also recently added a large number of mainstream software products for Webmasters to promote.

"The time is definitely now for online video on demand," TopBucks? Marketing Director Lee Bucyk added. "It?s been a while in coming, but the size of the broadband market has finally reached a point where charging on a per-view or per-minute basis is viable. In previous years, the suspect quality of the video files and length of download time made it unfeasible, but there are now cable and DSL subscribers in numbers sufficient to support a serious online pay per view effort."