Porn Valley- Thursday night on his KSEX, www.ksexradio.com show Chef Jeff, www.theindustryvoice.com, reported that his girlfriend Kinzie Kenner, who’s usually on the show with him, was home recuperating from a scene she did with Nick Manning.
“She did a scene with Nick Manning- I’ve heard this about him- he was a guest on my show a while ago.” Jeff said he told Manning this was the way the show was going to go, that he was going to have the female guest on first. According to Jeff, Manning, ignoring protocol, just decided to make his entrance a full half hour ahead of schedule. “He just walks right in. And for the entire rest of the show he’s not paying attention to me. He’s just groping on the boob of the female guest. No respect.”
Jeff said he got to the set just before the scene was done. “All I hear in the other room is SMACK- SMACK- SMACK- like someone’s ass getting smacked really hard. Take that fucking bitch, you fucking whore! I hear that in the other room I’m think it must be a really intense scene. Then when I saw it was Nick Manning that came out I go, oh no. And she [Kenner] didn’t come out of that room in a good mood. She was really upset and distraught. She used the word abusive. She said that Nick Manning was abusive with her. She said that she had told him and told the director, hey, that is not cool what he’s doing- that he was throat gagging her more than she wanted to. He was slapping her ass more than she wanted him to. She told him repeatedly and the director told him don’t do that yet he continued to do that.”
When asked, co-ho Dee said she heard that unfortunately as well. “I’ve heard a lot of girls say they’ll ask him things like please don’t refer to me in certain terms. Don’t be so rough with me. I think that’s what turns him on is the fact that when the girls say please don’t be rough with me or talk to me that way he does it even more. And even the girls go up to the director and say, hey, don’t talk to her that way, he still does it. To me that’s a sign of lack of respect for the director and for the girls. No one has stood up to him and said, look, your attitude sucks. What gives you the right to treat the girls like that. Even if they’re telling you stop doing it.”
Jeff said he was told by the director that he would not hire Manning again. “He shouldn’t have hired him in the first place,” opined Dee.
Jeff said he was calling Manning out. “I want him to come back on my show and I want to talk to this guy face to face. I don’t really care if a male talent slaps the girl around, fucks her hard, talks dirty to her, is abusive to her if that’s what she wants. If she’s okay with it. My problem with him- that fucking asshole- is when a girl is not okay with it. When a director tells him don’t do that and a girl tells him don’t do that and he still does it. I’ll talk to him. I’m not afraid of Nick fucking pussy Manning. He can come back on this how. I’ll fucking talk to him face-to-face. I live in downtown L.A. I ain’t afraid of anybody.”
Dee said in the business there’s a fine line of what performers will accept. “But when it gets to our threshold of stop, you stop.”
Drawing a parallel to a hockey incident of a couple of years ago when a player was brought up on criminal charges, Jeff wondered when similar activity in porn becomes criminal. “If you’re in the mainstream and a girl tells you no, and you fuck her anyway that’s rape. In porn, in a movie, on a set when the director tells you don’t hit a girl, don’t abuse a girl and the girl tells you don’t do this and you continue to do it, when does it become criminal?”
Dee said she would assume it does when both the director and the girl are telling you to stop. “Because most guys don’t listen to the girls anyway.” Jeff played a soundbite from a KSEX show the night before that Manning was on. It was of him growling at a girl calling her a bitch and a fucking whore.
“That’s exactly what I heard today,” said Jeff. “I was in the other room reading a newspaper, waiting for the scene to finish. That’s what I heard from the other room, ‘ you fucking whooooooooooooore, aaaaaaaaaaaaaaagh’ I thought to myself even if the girl likes it or the director wants it, if I as a viewer, a consumer watching porn, the biggest turn off is when the male talent is overly vocal like that. I’m not exaggerating. I’m really not.” Someone in the chatroom wrote in to say that Manning was cool and Jeff wanted to have the writer banned. “Yeah, he’s real fuckin’ cool.”
Girth Brooks’s take was that behavior like that was symptomatic of a bigger problem. “What if he’s got some weird fetish like raping chicks?” Jeff suspected that Manning’s mom stroked his dick off when he was a little kid. “Or he got his heart broken a bunch of times, now he’s taking it out on the porn chicks.”
Jeff went on to note that movies such as those Brandon Irons makes are becoming edgier and edgier. “There’s 20 guys cumming and slapping and spitting and that sort of stuff. Where is the line? We’re talking about indecency and obscenity. People are talking about Rob Black and Lizzy Borden from Extreme being brought up on obscenity charges. Where is the line? Is it okay in a movie to spit in a girl’s face and slap her? Don’t get me wrong. I’m a big perv. I don’t mind it when a girl gets slapped in the face a little bit. I don’t mind when she gets spit on a little bit. But where is the line when it becomes abusive?”
Dee ventured to say there was a fine line to it all. “In allowing someone to treat you a certain way.” Dee said because things change over the years she asks talent- even those she’s worked with before- is there any dos and don’ts. “And they’ll ask me is there any dos and don’ts.” From her personal standpoint, Dee said she will not allow herself to be called a cunt.
“I will kick your ass. Secondly, don’t slap me and don’t spit in my face.” Dee said she’ll walk off the set if someone crosses the line with her.
Jeff said it was his understanding that performer Georgia Adair walked off a set with Manning. Jeff said he told Kinzie the same thing. “Don’t be afraid to stop the scene.”
“There is no need for you to take that,” Dee agreed. Jeff said he was of the view that responsibility falls on the director’s shoulders. “There is enough male talent out there that you can pick up the phone and get a replacement dick to your set within 30 minutes.”