Adultinternet.TV Ready to Launch January 6

Wild Seductress Productions and Cybergraffix are ready to launch Adultinternet.TV January 6.

The two companies describe Adultinternet.TV as "a new and bold concept in broadcasting. The concepts of streaming media on the Internet are not new any more, but no one has attempted to create the experience that Adultinternet.TV has created.

"Adultinternet.TV is an Adult-based broadcast platform, but unlike other Adult streaming media; like streaming movies, clips, live shows and so on," they said in their January 3 announcement. "Adultinternet.TV is an actual TV station with seasons, shows, stars, sitcoms, news, reviews, movies, education, live broadcasts, and of course reality-based shows. Adultinternet.TV is free for anyone to watch, we are giving it away as a free plug-in to Adult Webmasters as to create an age verification system so that minors do not access the station. The station is supported by advertising, commercials and banner ads."

And it has something else to recommend it, Wild Seductress and Cybergraffix said: an absence of Federal Communications Commission control. That, they said, allows "advertisers like tobacco companies to once again air commercials. The Adultinternet.TV broadcast platform also allows broadcasters to be more creative in creating their advertising."

Co-founder Mark Newman and partners Dan Gale and Tony Coye said they put much time and thought as well as money into the new system. "Nobody has done a real Adult TV station, that's like real TV, supported by advertisers and free to viewers," Newman said in a pre-launch Wired interview. "This isn't just streaming porn. We're trying to run exactly like a [television network].

"Software inserts the commercials, everything is tracked by database, there's no one in a booth" cueing up bumpers, advertisements, and shows," he continued. "We had to invent a lot of stuff that no one has done before, like real-time tracking for advertisers."

Adultinternet.TV actually began streaming programming at least a week before the official launch, but Newman told Wired they can't lose even if the programming channel bombs – he said he and his partners were informed reliably that they could sell the Adultinternet.TV software they developed for millions.

But launch they will, and nine months earlier than they first wanted to do it, Newman told the magazine. "We weren't talking very much about the station in the beginning, but word got out anyway, and we started to get phone calls, hits on the site, mentions," he said. "We're rushing to get it out now."