Fantasy: Bellesa's Michelle Shnaidman Interview

This interview ran in the June issue of AVN magazine. Click here for a link to the digital edition.

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Women and pornography. Like many relationships, it's complicated.Until the home video revolution came along, most hardcore porn was sold or traded in spaces that were not welcoming to women: stag parties, dirty urban arcades and sex shops that catered to the so-called raincoater crowd.After that came online porn, which had its own barriers to entry. Take the experiences of Michelle Shnaidman. As a young woman born in the digital era, Shnaidman didn't feel welcome on tube sites, where female bodies are center stage, but women are not catered to as consumers."I would log onto these websites and I couldn't shake this feeling of being alienated. For me personally it didn't feel accessible to me—[the content] didn't speak to me. There's amazing content out there, but a lot of it is made by men, for men. And so I really couldn't shake that. It became an obsession," Shnaidman says.Two years ago, Shnaidman came up with a solution to that obsession when she founded This link (Bellesa.co) is not approved. Submit this link for approval, an online platform dispensing female-friendly erotica and sexual wellness information. The site celebrated its two-year birthday in February. As the company CEO and original brand ambassador, Shnaidman talks passionately about Bellesa's mission.There were "three original pillars" of Bellesa: articles about sexual wellness, literary erotica, and sexually explicit videos. But first and foremost the focus was on creating a safe space for women and "the feeling of being part of a community."Shnaidman elaborates, "Women engage with their sexuality differently, so whether that's by watching videos or reading erotica or reading articles about sex or sexual health, they were able to come to Bellesa and have this one-stop shop for all things female sexuality."But right away the company ran into a problem with one of the pillars: video. The team was so focused on creating an online platform that would empower women to engage with their sexuality in a safe environment that reflected their desires, that they ultimately ended up neglecting how that same platform might disempower the content creators who are responsible for that content in the first place."It was four, maybe five months in and our traffic got so big and we were getting all this amazing press from mainstream publications," the Bellesa CEO says. But then the industry took note—and began complaining about copyright violation."It was kind of this rude awakening, really—I was paying so much attention to the mainstream and working to empower them and I didn't realize this whole time that I was disempowering this whole other group of women who are in the adult industry," Shnaidman says. …and then things took a turn

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