Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, did you know that you can actually find me
naked online? Yes, I'm a photographer, director, podcaster, and in
my secret life, I actually have a platform with all
of the spicy content that you didn't think I made.
I know it surprised me too. If you're curious about
what happens when I'm in front of the camera instead
(00:21):
of behind it, head to my OnlyFans OnlyFans dot com
slash Holly Randall. It's raw, it's sexy, and it's totally uncensored.
That's OnlyFans dot com slash Holly Randal. But don't say
I didn't warn you.
Speaker 2 (00:37):
You were listening to a pleasure podcast. For more from
our sex podcast collective, visit Pleasure Podcasts dot com.
Speaker 1 (01:02):
Hey everybody, Welcome back to Holly Randall Unfiltered. My guest
today has been in the industry for over twenty years
and is a man of many identities. You may know
him as Nick dent Reese, Rideout or Dom Cruise, but
no matter what name he's performing under, he is an
absolute legend in the industry. Welcome to the show.
Speaker 3 (01:21):
Thank you for having me, Holly ye honor. Hello everyone.
Speaker 1 (01:24):
You have a lot to tell us about, like how
you've arrived now to dom cruise. You've had quite the journey,
So I guess let's start at the beginning. When you
first got scouted to be in the adult industry, What
were you doing that caught people's attention.
Speaker 3 (01:38):
Yeah, I was doing amateur bodybuilding, like right out of
high school. I mean I was really into it in
high school. And you know, some my idols were Arnold
Swarzenegger of course, and Ronnie Coleman. So I had a
few friends we would compete. I did an amateur bodybuilding show.
I think I was up in Washington at the time,
just above Oregon, and there was a photographer who scouted me.
(02:01):
He went to bodybuilding shows looking for guys that were fit,
and then I went home and a week later got
a phone call at my parents' house and I was
like twenty one, and he kind of pulled me in
with the promise of he shoots for Playgirl, which he did,
but he didn't get me in Playgirl. That happened like
five six years later. Oh wow. Eventually made it on
(02:24):
the cover with Greg Wiener. But Ron Lloyd who initially
got me in and he was still shooting on film
back then in four Yeah, and really great photos. Got
in a bunch of magazines with him Mandate to Torso, Freshman, Hauncho,
a bunch of them, And once those came out, then
I got calls from studios.
Speaker 1 (02:44):
So back then because I actually used to shoot for
play Girl. Oh really, yeah, so did my mom. So
funny enough, So back then were they doing erections? Did
you have? Because when I was shooting for them, they
were like you had, They wanted you to have an
erection in the photo, but before then they didn't do
(03:06):
you Remember that was an issue for me because I
was the only woman on set and I was shooting
like male adult stars. Like let's see who I shot,
Alan Stafford, I shot.
Speaker 4 (03:21):
Oh god, what's his name? Dropping loads? Guy Nick.
Speaker 3 (03:28):
Manning, dropping loads?
Speaker 1 (03:31):
Just look him up.
Speaker 4 (03:32):
You'll see, you'll see.
Speaker 1 (03:34):
He couldn't do a cumshot with out screaming dropping loads
like during Like he wouldn't do a cumpshot without saying
that because that was like his signature move.
Speaker 4 (03:44):
It was so annoying.
Speaker 1 (03:45):
So like it didn't matter if you were doing like
a period piece or you know, trying to do something
that definitely would not call for that.
Speaker 4 (03:52):
Nope, Nope, wouldn't not say it.
Speaker 3 (03:55):
That's crazy. Yeah, it'd be nice to have something like
a handle or I mean like a motto or people
know you from the cum shutting.
Speaker 1 (04:02):
No, but no, he was now and then he would
bring headshots to set and like sign them and like
give them to the crew. What he had a rope
with his own name on the back. He was something else.
He was something else anyways, So I shot him. I
shot some guy justin who was really in defeat. He
was the best because all he needed to do was
(04:24):
see my feet to get an erection, and then he
wanted to give me a foot massage during lunch, which
was awesome.
Speaker 3 (04:30):
Yeah, so that I liked.
Speaker 1 (04:32):
But otherwise, like it was a struggle because they wanted
to get an erection and I was not willing to
help them. Oh so I had to bring a box
of porn magazines because like we didn't really have cell
phones at like smartphones at the time. Yeah, And so
I had this box of porn magazines with lube and
baby wipes in it, and I would give it to
(04:53):
them and be like, let me know when you're ready.
And that was my experience shooting for play Girl.
Speaker 3 (04:58):
Wow Y, Yeah, that must have been a shock.
Speaker 1 (05:01):
Yeah, it was.
Speaker 3 (05:02):
It was, yeah, and that's when they switched over to
more erotic, with more hardcore with the erections.
Speaker 1 (05:09):
Yeah. Yeah, so you think probably it sounds like it
didn't matter at the time for you.
Speaker 3 (05:14):
Yeah, I can't quite recall it was. We did it
in Santa Fe, New Mexico. It was a college issue.
So it was me and like four other guys on
some ranch, and you know, we all took turns taking
our single photos. Because they didn't make it too even
though their audience was guys, their customers were males that
purchased it. They didn't make it overtly gay.
Speaker 1 (05:34):
Yeah. No, they definitely pretended like it was for women.
Like they absolutely sold it like it was for women.
And I was like, women literally do not by magazine.
Like I'm a woman and I'm telling you right now,
like we don't buy this magazine. So that's pretty funny. So,
but you didn't get in until six years later, So
how so tell me, like what happened then?
Speaker 3 (05:55):
So yeah, I went up to Bellingham, Washington where you
had a studio and shot with him. He had a
really nice studio, all the backdrops and and we even
did a one video called body solo. He even scouted
the same process another actor, even from my hometown Salem
(06:16):
where I live zeb Atlas. Have you heard of that
huge dude? Massive chin from growth hormone looks like a horse.
Speaker 1 (06:23):
Does that give you? Does that give you a big chin?
Speaker 3 (06:26):
Oh? Yeah, your hands will grow your chin? Yeah? Wait?
Speaker 1 (06:30):
What does it make your bones? Oh? Of course, I
guess it makes your bones grow right, or your cardinal know,
your bones, makes your bones growbably.
Speaker 3 (06:37):
Probably all yeah, but I mean it won't necessarily make
you taller. It's just certain aspects like your head can
even grow oh weird ears. Oh no, just like elbows
will come out a bit further. What yeah?
Speaker 1 (06:49):
Oh no, so he sounds good.
Speaker 3 (06:51):
He morphed into but so he found him as well.
And then the magazines, I think it probably took four
to six months to come out because they to be
developed since it wasn't digital.
Speaker 1 (07:02):
Oh yeah, you had to take it to get developed.
You had to edit them the slides and the light
table and pull out the ones that you wanted and
put them back in another sheet that that used to
do my job.
Speaker 3 (07:13):
Yeah, yeah, so you know about it. Yeah, And then
then once they came out, then I was getting phone
calls from studios down in Los Angeles. I wanted to
do video. I was on the phone with Randy from
Randy Blue and then Dino, another guy from like Sean
Cody or corbyin Fisher and I was just talking back
and forth trying to make the right decision, and I
(07:34):
went with Randy. It's a great decision. And I came
down and you know, you start I called the slippery slope. Yeah. Yeah,
you come in one one video a little just just
a little jo, you know, just you know how to
play out, play with yourself, do it all the time.
Speaker 1 (07:50):
Yeah, yeah, just do it in front of a camera
show yeah yeah.
Speaker 3 (07:55):
And then oh the fans love it. They want more.
Here's a little more money.
Speaker 1 (08:00):
So were you thinking at the time, because so you
you're a straight guy, right, yeah, so you were thinking
at the time, Okay, I could use the money. This
I'm not having sex with other men. This is like easy, right.
Is that kind of what was going through your mind?
Speaker 3 (08:15):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (08:15):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (08:15):
Initially I thought it was just going to be I
could just do jo's my whole career. But then it
was let somebody suck you, and then a toy video
you suck somebody and down, down you go a little
more money each time. Yeah, but initially, always from the beginning,
it was you know, being in a small town in Salem, Oregon,
(08:37):
I and not having much. I have lots of brothers
and sisters, so one parent working. You know, we didn't
have ways to just go to Disneyland. So I wanted
to get down to LA get into acting, and come
to find out, it does hurt your career in that side,
you know, you just get turned away, especially commercial work.
(08:58):
So I've been turned down a lot that way. But
it got me down to LA. I met some really
amazing people and I'm still hacking away at the at
the acting, just doing my independent stuff. But always from
the beginning, it wasn't just adult industry, you know. I
wanted to get into it, wanted to be you know,
a real actor and come down to Los Angeles, and
(09:18):
it got me here. Yeah, in the back door.
Speaker 1 (09:21):
Yeah, I literally. So you're very open about being gay
for pay as a straight guy. So what was your
initial gut reaction when you were asked to do that first?
Like like having a guy suck you off?
Speaker 4 (09:34):
Like what what went through your mind?
Speaker 3 (09:36):
Well, since I'd never done it before, you know there
there was will I like, it was one of the
first thoughts, but once it got into it, you know,
the mouth was on it. I had to go into
my mind and find something I really liked. And then
that's that's been my process, you know since then. It
was get one thing that really turns me on and
(09:59):
just replay.
Speaker 1 (09:59):
It with a woman. I'm assuming that.
Speaker 3 (10:01):
Yeah, okay, yeah, get that highlight reel of and.
Speaker 1 (10:06):
That rolodex that basically all male performers have in their heads. Yeah, like,
no matter what you're doing.
Speaker 3 (10:12):
Oh, I'm good at going into it. But we also
we back then because it was mostly straight guys doing
the gay for pay, because the gay guys didn't want
their friends to see them doing gay porn. It wasn't
that accepted. But as straight guys were like, none of
our friends are going to see it.
Speaker 1 (10:30):
Oh yeah, good point.
Speaker 3 (10:32):
We'll just we'll do it. And yeah, but it's the internet.
Speaker 1 (10:35):
We Yeah.
Speaker 3 (10:36):
In five when I started the videos, people didn't quite
comprehend the far reach that the Internet has, and especially
now with social media, it's like something comes out every
corner of the world. Yeah, in second, split seconds, milliseconds.
Speaker 1 (10:52):
Yeah, I mean I remember like when the internet really
started taking off, and guys that I had been working
with for a while only in straight porn there, you
know a lot of them had done some gay work
before they worked in straight and had never told anybody,
and those like clips started to pop up, and you know,
(11:12):
and of course, like they were mortified. They were mortified
because back then it's so different now and I'm sure
you've seen the change, but back then it was like,
I mean, the straight industry was very homophobic. Yeah, you know,
and when girls were like, oh, you did gay porn
once fifteen years ago, I'm not having sex with you. Yeah,
you know, I saw that a lot.
Speaker 3 (11:34):
Yeah, that that also, but that hurt my chances of
doing is from doing the gay porn, you know, not
accepted in mainstream, not accepted in straight porn. It's like
stay over here, and that's why I'm trying to. But
now we have the ability to produce our own stuff,
and you know, we are the industry now, the creators are.
It's the powers kind of taken away from the studios. Yeah,
(11:57):
it's us and it's us like a family helped each
other out. Yeah, And there's so many females now that
are much much more accepting and actually kind of like
like the fact that guys have done by or gay stuff.
And also you have the better testing standards yes, medications,
(12:17):
better yes, and knowledge about sti's yes, particularly the HIV yes,
which is you're less likely to catch it from somebody
that is positive but tests negative. I'm no doctor, so
check that out yourself. But yeah, it's it's lot safer.
Speaker 1 (12:37):
Now because their viral load is so low that it's
virtually impossible for them to pass it on. I mean, yeah,
we've come so far from when you know, it's when
HIV first kind of came out. It's it's wild because
my parents were making my mom was filming movies at
the time when the HIV epidemic began, and it's actually
(13:03):
one of the main reasons that my parents stopped shooting
movies because they were so scared. They had I remember
as a kid there was a blood truck like outside
of our house and they were having people come in
and they were testing them before they would have They
were one of the only producers that were testing people
before they would cast them. But of course back then,
(13:24):
it took you like two weeks to get your test back,
so like who knows what you were doing that, you
know what I mean, It just it wasn't and so
they were just like, we don't because back then magazines
didn't show penetration. So then my mom just shot photos
and there was no penetration and so like there wasn't
(13:45):
like any risk of transmitting like HIV. But that's what
like pulled my parents out of shooting movies. So it's
kind of wild.
Speaker 3 (13:53):
He has a big thing, a huge fear, like the
entire you know world had, I mean, even me getting
into it. We were first shooting with condoms back then,
in like five up to my contract eleven or twelve.
I would as soon as I was done film and
I'd just I'd go spray my dick with rubbing alcohol.
As soon as I was done, I would watch it
(14:16):
a few times and yeah, just just to make myself
feel more comfortable. So I was very on top of that,
always having rubbing alcohol to spray my member with.
Speaker 1 (14:27):
M So, after the first time you did like a
gay scene, like, how did you feel afterwards? Did you
feel like, oh my god, what have I done? I
just asked, because so you know, I'm sure you've heard this.
So many straight men are like I could never. So
I'm just curious about like how it felt for you.
Speaker 3 (14:46):
Like I said, as soon as as soon as like
a mouth was on my my my penis or I
was in somewhere, and I if they had a hairy button,
like I'd have to I'd have to like kind of
like make my eyes blur so I wouldn't like quite
see it. And I and just keep that that female
(15:09):
in my in my mind?
Speaker 1 (15:10):
Was it easier for you then to work with twinks?
Are like younger guys that are more Is it more?
And is that effeminine? Is that the right way to
say it? I don't really know.
Speaker 3 (15:21):
Yeah, thinner, thinner build you have more feminine probably like
Jim yesterday on set, Jim Power says that they're twinkies
because you fill them up like twinkies.
Speaker 1 (15:32):
I love Jim good. He's so good. So would those
like would that be easier for you? Because I'm like
a bear is like the big like burly like masculine
hairy guys, right, yeah, would that be a harder fit
for you?
Speaker 3 (15:46):
It is harder for me. Yeah, yeah, the twink in
a wig or makes a little bit easier. So and
and with Randy Blue when I when I first started
years ago, was like the all American jock type, so
there wasn't like big burly guys, and I kind of
became the one to break them in. I'm like, come on,
(16:08):
it's just you know, it's just playing with each other's dicks.
It's it, you know, some straight stuff. We'd have porn,
straight porn playing, like on a little DVD pop up
or on the TV. So we'd just we'd sit there
and get up and then jump into the set and
the scene and if we needed to get back up,
we'd just go up to the screen and watch some
(16:28):
straight porn and yeah, you know, just straight dudes sticking
it in each other. And then the cumpshots were always
it was always uh just jerked jerk to pop like
on ABS. Usually I didn't have to take anything in
the face or I didn't have to you know, thrust
to pop, so that was a little more that's a
little easier. Yeah, I've now just worked past that so
(16:52):
I can I don't need anything to watch now. My
mind can really just put me there and I can
just thrust a pop from any position in any hole.
There's ones that are more preferred, But.
Speaker 1 (17:06):
Do you think that we as a society is so
concerned with like masculinity and the definition of masculinity because
you know, girls can be straight and they can go
and do girl girl scenes and nobody thinks twice about it, right,
But men if they're doing gay scenes, then like most
(17:28):
people are like, oh, there's no way he's straight, Like
that's that's not true. And so do you think that
it's something that where men are just that all men
could potentially enjoy sex with other men if there wasn't
like this rigid you know, societal kind of what I'm
(17:50):
looking for, stigma, ridgid societal stigma against it. Because you know,
if you look back like history, like you look back
like Roman times, right, it was not uncommon for men
to have sex with other men and it was not
looked down upon. It was it was usually like men
in power had like a younger man that they dominated.
Speaker 4 (18:13):
But like it wasn't and didn't make you like gay,
you know what I mean.
Speaker 1 (18:17):
It wasn't like there wasn't like the strong definition that
like stuck with you.
Speaker 4 (18:21):
It was just like you use that you had pleasure.
Speaker 1 (18:23):
With that person, but you married a woman and you like,
you know it wasn't there was a lot more fluidity.
Speaker 3 (18:29):
Yeah I'm no history buff, but yeah, you're right there.
There is many examples of that back in the day
with Greek and Roman and and it is. It is society.
The stigma probably mostly stemming from like religion. And I
know I have it because I haven't been able to
(18:49):
just open freely. If I would, I'd be so happy
because I get so much gay born shoots. I'd be
really happy. But I'm trying to, you know, go off
on the other direction and jump the fence. But there
is a stigma, and it just it stops us from
being open. And boy, I mean, you ever go to
(19:10):
a gay club and see how happy they are. They
are so happy.
Speaker 1 (19:14):
So in college I used to go, Me and my
girlfriends used to go to the gay club to dance
because number one, the music was better, and second, like
there was just we to get away from the straight
guys that were just like would get drunk and grind
up against us and would just like harass us the
whole time. We're like, we just want to go out
with the girls and have fun, like get the fuck
away from me. And then the straight guys figured it
(19:36):
out and they started going to thek clubs too. They're like,
that's where the women are going.
Speaker 3 (19:40):
So but yeah, I was just in Hawaii at a
club and yeah, you can see the straight girls. They're
just having a good time. Yeah, And the owner was
telling us how, yeah, guys have figured that out, and
then they're coming the straight guys or they think it's
like shooting fish in a barrel. You know, it's an
easy pick up.
Speaker 1 (20:00):
So at what point in your career did you create
the Reese rideout persona?
Speaker 3 (20:05):
That was when I first got with Ron Lloyd doing
the magazines. Like the name I was thinking of was
a street I lived on, Sunnyside and like my middle name,
so I was thinking Ryan's Summerside.
Speaker 1 (20:18):
You weren't going to do your pet and then you've
heard that, right, so your first pet and then the
street you grew up on.
Speaker 3 (20:24):
Yeah, yeah, I'm not sure what pet I had at
the time.
Speaker 4 (20:30):
Do you remember, like your first supposed to be your first.
Speaker 3 (20:33):
Pet that you ever had, first pet you ever had?
Speaker 1 (20:35):
Like that?
Speaker 4 (20:35):
You remember as a kid, mine is very bad?
Speaker 3 (20:39):
What's yours?
Speaker 1 (20:39):
Mister dog? Charnock? Very very bad?
Speaker 3 (20:48):
Mine probably would have been my mouth fivell so, and
then is it the first street you were on.
Speaker 1 (20:56):
Yeah, the street you grew up on. Okay, I mean
I guess if you moved a lot, you can decide
which street you consider. I don't know.
Speaker 3 (21:03):
Then it could have been five O Sunnyside or five
O Idlewood. My first photographer, he had a probably a
guy he had a crush on it in high school.
Last name was right out and then we went with
a first name that also started with R, so he
kind of he created Reese write out Ron Lloyd first photographer.
Speaker 1 (21:25):
You're also known publicly as you by your legal name
Nick Dent. So why did you decide to keep that
as part of your brand when so many point stars don't.
Speaker 3 (21:33):
Because to separate the mainstream somewhat, I mean, when you
don't want people I'm not trying to push anything on
anybody like I want. I want him to like my
films and acting for what they are, and when they
google to find what you're doing and what you're up to.
I don't want just so much content under the same
(21:56):
name coming up. I'm not trying to push adult stuff
on anybody, so somewhat of a separation. I know it's
hard with the Internet. If you type in Nick, then
other stuff will come up to but I just don't
want it to be blatantly off obviously, like I'm trying
to advertise and sell people, like I'm trying to use
Nick for dam or race.
Speaker 1 (22:16):
But I mean the fact that, like you acknowledge that
because so many people try so hard to rigidly separate
the two, you know that like they hope that nobody
will find oh, you know, like I actually had a
girl who called me a couple of weeks ago who
was very upset. She's, you know, now trying to get
into mainstream, and she like someone had taken photos that
(22:39):
I had shot at her and posted on a website
under her legal name, which she's trying to use for acting,
and you know, and I didn't do it, somebody else
did it, but she was really upset about it.
Speaker 4 (22:50):
And I was just like, well, first of all, you
see the same first.
Speaker 1 (22:54):
Name, and then but also like it's very hard to
completely separate that because people will find it, like you said, yeah.
Speaker 3 (23:03):
Yeah, it's it's it's impossible. Yeah, there is no separating it. Yeah,
it'll be there forever. So you just have to you know,
accept it. And and that's and that's the reason. You know,
I do accept it. I know if you search Nick
it'll all come up and vice versa. But to give somewhat,
I'm at least trying to say, if you type in
(23:24):
Nick Dent, you might get ninety percent real acting stuff.
Speaker 1 (23:29):
There is a pretty strong divide between the mainstream, mainstream,
the straight industry, and the gay industry, and just in
terms of like we don't really communicate that much. Like
I know everything about the straight industry. I don't know
anything about the gay industry, which is interesting.
Speaker 4 (23:48):
So there.
Speaker 1 (23:50):
It is rumored that gay performers make significantly more money
than straight male performers do. Is that true?
Speaker 3 (24:00):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah it can be.
Speaker 1 (24:02):
And then what is it you've done having done both?
What is like some other like major differences between the
two industries.
Speaker 3 (24:10):
Yeah, how much you get paid is different. I mean
it used to be so much more back in the day. Yeah,
I just had to work once a month.
Speaker 1 (24:17):
Yeah, used to be so much more for all of
us for everything, yeah the day.
Speaker 3 (24:21):
Yeah right, but and that was like I'd work like
I could get a scene done pretty quick back in
the day. I saw I really technically only work like
two three hours a month.
Speaker 4 (24:33):
So then so then it almost kind of feels like.
Speaker 1 (24:37):
You're not not that you're not doing gaye porn, but
it sounds like it's such a small allotment of your time. Yeah,
you know.
Speaker 3 (24:44):
Yeah, And that's also what's you know, what's kind of
been different now with being a content creator and having
to film so much more. See back in the day
when I first got into it, and I just had
to do it for two three hours a month, Yeah,
easy peasy, And at how young I was, it's such
a hard boner you do anything. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (25:01):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (25:03):
But now it's like you're going to content alses, you know,
with a couple dozen guys, and you're trying to shoot
three films in a day, and it becomes very different
than what it once was. And the pay, yeah, it's
down a lot. But now we have the ability with
(25:25):
the fan sites to make as much as you want
the gay side, And since I've had such a name
for so long, it's a little bit easier. If I
would have just jumped into only Fans now, it'd be
different at forty forty two, Yeah, I do. However, wish
Only Fans was around when I was twenty one, because
I loved doing the online videos and marketing. I think
(25:49):
I'd have been so good at twenty one on only fans.
Speaker 1 (25:52):
Yeah, I mean it's definitely changed the industry so much.
But you also have other avenues of marketing. You all
are You are a would you say brand ambassador free
load boot, Yes, who also sponsors this podcast. So tell
me a little bit about load boost and what it
(26:12):
does for you.
Speaker 4 (26:13):
This is a very organic ad by the way.
Speaker 3 (26:15):
Yeah. You know what's great is like I'm like a
supplement buff, like an addict. I have a closet full
of supplements. So I've been researching these components for a
few years and I was actually taken them before I
came across the guys, the brothers and Ben. They're at
load Boost. You have a j Tom and Ben. Great guys,
(26:37):
they're really good and one of their wives has put
all the research in here, who's actually a doctor, certified doctor,
and the ingredients in here. You got pigm which helps
activate the cowper gland and helps out with pre come
give zinc to balance that out so you don't deplete it.
You also have copper. There's bromelayan extract from pineapple, both
(27:00):
to help out with flavoring. And sunflower less than helps
out with just volume of your shot, so you got
flavor and the activity. I have a microscope at home,
really yeah, and I've looked at my semen under the microscope.
Speaker 4 (27:15):
Wow.
Speaker 3 (27:16):
And one of my videos, I put it up on
my projector or no, I'm going to do projector next,
but on my Mac, my twenty seven inch MacBook screen.
I like, I threw the live sperm up on there. Wow.
And I put that on my of and it went
pretty wild. But when you take this your your little
sperm are very active. Oh my god, they're super healthy,
(27:39):
swimming fast.
Speaker 4 (27:41):
That's that's kind of cool.
Speaker 1 (27:42):
I've never seen anybody do like it before and after
like little oh yeah.
Speaker 3 (27:47):
It's very noticeable from before I was taken this supplement
till when I was you know, after a few months
of taken it, they were just so active. And after
about two weeks the average person, we'll see an ink
crease and volume and taste. And I've had some females
recently like love the taste of my shot.
Speaker 1 (28:08):
Of you of your cum where you can maybe they'll
make a little like a little smoothie.
Speaker 3 (28:14):
Out of it, you know, Oh, they swallowed it down.
Speaker 1 (28:19):
Because like that is a big problem a lot of
times with a lot of guys, like if they if
you don't eat healthy, drink a lot of coffee, acidic stuff,
smoke cigarettes just like.
Speaker 3 (28:29):
It's or it will come out to like liquidy, almost watery,
or it just dissipates fast. This will make it thick
and white.
Speaker 1 (28:37):
Which is what we need for the cum shots because
we need to be able to see it. It's a
visual industry, right.
Speaker 3 (28:42):
Yeah, that's very important. Yeah, So it's been great. I
haven't left home without a bottle ever since I've been
with them.
Speaker 1 (28:49):
Fantastic.
Speaker 3 (28:50):
Always have it with me. I'll have one like in
my car, my backpack, suitcase, and when i'm when I'm
especially at content houses and you're shooting two three times
a day. Yeah, you definitely need it.
Speaker 1 (29:01):
Well you heard it straight from the guy who uses it.
So go to low boost dot com and use code
Holly for ten percent off. All right, let's talk about
Dom Cruise. Yeah, so who is he and how is
he different from Ree's Ride Out? Yeah?
Speaker 3 (29:22):
Very very different. I've been thinking about a name change
for well, probably the whole time I've been in it,
you know, a couple decades and I want something that
like resonates more with me being more truthful to myself.
And I think now I have the ability to make
(29:43):
that change because it's not a studio that is invested
in the name that I once was. You know Reese
write out where if you change your name, they're going
to lose money. Now they can't tell me no because
most most of my funds come from from of fan
sites or whatever platform the aggregate I use to put
(30:04):
up my videos I self produce and dom. It's more
it's more my soul, like who I am, trying to
create a character that I can be proud of that
I can like tell my friends my family openly and
not be and not that I'm ashamed in any way
(30:25):
of all the gay porn that I've done. You know,
I love the gay community and they've helped me out
so much over the years, and I'm such a big
ally and being able to jump that chasm and go
from one side of the fence to the other doing
the gay in the straight. I'm cheering for them. I'm
cheering for all my gay brothers and sisters. But it's
(30:47):
it's just me personally trying to be more true to
myself and also being sober. Now a little over a year,
I'm a bit more clear headed in what being being
honest with myself and and just trying to show that
to to the industry and to the other performers out there,
(31:10):
and to be taken serious because without the name change,
like I tried, I did like doctor ride Out for
a little bit, trying to keep Reese ride Out in
some way because I put so much energy for over
two decades into that name. But I but I'm not
taken completely seriously. It's like, oh, just throw them in
the by scene or it was Seth Gamble backed out,
(31:33):
pull recent he'll I'm like, oh, good, yes, this is
a straight CIS scene. Seth backed out. I got called
in since it's Rees throwing another guy. I get to
set like, you won't care. Yeah. So it's trying to
also show the industry because I loved I loved doing
(31:55):
studio work. I too, I you know, I like going
on bigger productions, memorizing line and having a higher produced
product out there. So I kind of got to show
them that I mean business and switching the name and
and I have this vision and it's starting to starting
to open up and and I appreciate you having me
(32:17):
on as as Dom Cruise and and people will see it.
You know, it'll come through.
Speaker 1 (32:22):
Do you have like a specific game plan that, like
a specific marketing plan. I mean, I guess this is
part of it, right, Yeah.
Speaker 3 (32:32):
Well, like you know film, uh, you know feature things.
You know I want to do. I can I have,
I have film crews, I have directors. I can I
can put together an entire feature film, a full length thing,
get it submitted on a v and get it up
there and the running with all these other big companies
(32:53):
and and have something that I can be proud of
and I like I like action, horror, you know, something
that's good with a good story.
Speaker 1 (33:04):
And you have two mainstream films releasing soon Yeah, under
Nick Dent. Yes, the horror movie Crystal and the sci
fi thriller Apophesis Apofus APUs, Yeah, twenty twenty nine. So
tell me a little bit about how those projects came together.
Speaker 3 (33:24):
Yeah, so Apofus twenty twenty nine that is sponsored by lobost. Oh. Yeah,
so you're going to see them in the film. We
have a rebel Ryder makes a quick cameo in there too,
and that's about an asteroid that's coming to wipe out Earth.
I play I played the President like a JFK playboy
(33:44):
type president, okay, and we're in a bunker down under
the ground. So it bounces back and forth. There's two
stories of some friends that don't have the means like
the President does to go into a safe haven underground.
They just have to go to the beach and watch
the asteroid come and succumb to their death. But I'm down,
I'm this playboy president down in the bunker. I bring
(34:06):
hookers down.
Speaker 4 (34:08):
I mean, what else are you going to do at
the end of the world.
Speaker 3 (34:13):
There's blow there's so there's there's this dichotomy between the
friends that just have to go and accept fate and
the president down in the bunker just living it up.
So the story goes back and forth between that as
the asteroid approaches Earth and then Crystal. That's an action
horror film. My friend Clyde Waterhouse and I we wrote
(34:35):
it like in I think twenty fifteen or sixteen, didn't
quite have the guts to pull the trigger until a
nice PPP loan came around. I remember those well, and
so when that came out, I was like let's do this.
We can pay, we can pay actors, we can do this.
And Jeff Snyder, our DP on the film. He had
(34:58):
this next my hometown, like an outbuilding, really big outbuilding
we turned into a sound studio and he used to
be in a circus. So that the gentleman that had
since passed he purchased purchased the outbuilding and we filmed
in that area and built a set. My brother Jordan,
(35:19):
who's no longer with us, he helped me build the
set so that that set, it was a modular set.
You can make it into a big room. We'd move
the walls, make it to smaller, or you can make
it a long hallway, so all the flats that we
built could be adjusted to what you were shooting that day.
And the house Crystal, it's about a house that's underground,
(35:39):
the futuristic house. There's a dinner party and the house
goes haywire and starts killing the dinner guests.
Speaker 1 (35:46):
Oh interesting, and I have.
Speaker 3 (35:49):
To save everyone at the house. And we had a
really great special effects crew. We had my wife helped
out with wardrobe, really good wardrobe, color palette we picked.
And the story is fun, it's active there's a lot
going on, lots of blood, lots of gore, and now
(36:11):
with AI, we got a few little AI things in
there too, and you can't you can't even tell it's AI.
Speaker 1 (36:17):
It's so good, it's wild. Right, I'm not going to
have to I don't know. I don't know what's going
to happen in the future. I don't even want to.
And I love and fully embrace AI. But yeah, sometimes
it's scary. But where are these going to be released?
Speaker 3 (36:37):
Like?
Speaker 4 (36:37):
Where can people go and see these films?
Speaker 3 (36:39):
We're currently in the process with a distribution company, so
the possibility is two B or Netflix. There's the two
where it'll be and that hopefully before the end of
the year, those two will be out awesome. Yeah, and
there's one other one Killer Clown Girls. I think that's
going to be released beginning of next year.
Speaker 1 (37:01):
Tell me about that. Oh yeah, because I have an
angry clown fetish. People who have been watching this show
for a long time know that it's a very strange
thing about me. But I am like, I am into
like I yeah, I find like getting the idea of
getting sucked by an angry clown very odd. I'm sorry,
(37:25):
I'm sorry, there's gotta be one weird thing about me.
Speaker 3 (37:28):
Okay, I can get into that. Yeah. So yeah, Killer
clown Girls. It's a two part so the first part,
first feature part, will be out probably next year in
twenty twenty six, and it's about this this group of
females that they're kind of like in a battered women's group.
But one of them in the group has access to
(37:51):
like police records. She works at the department police department,
and they find all these abusers and then they dress
up as clowns and go out and whack them.
Speaker 1 (38:00):
Oh.
Speaker 4 (38:00):
This is kind of like a dexter.
Speaker 3 (38:02):
Ish yeah good, like killing for the good.
Speaker 1 (38:06):
Yeah yeah, man cut dexter mixed with Harley Quinn kind
of there.
Speaker 3 (38:10):
Some Harley Carley Quinn character kind of in there.
Speaker 1 (38:13):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (38:13):
There's chainsaws, there's baseball bats, there's you know, saws. Oh,
there there's a we're shooting. We're shooting one scene. I
played a detective in that one called Dylan Steele and
Roman P. Martinez, the writer and director of this. The
budget wise, we're at the Motel six, but he didn't
(38:34):
alert them we're filming, So we're in this small room
with a crew of like six to nine people and
a few actors. There's a dozen people in this small
room and I'm getting dildo's in my eye sockets. Wow
on the bed.
Speaker 1 (38:50):
Wow.
Speaker 3 (38:51):
Okay by by the leader, the main clown check uh huh.
And she she had to run out to her car
to go do something and she's in this neglige and
they saw on the cameras. So within a few seconds
we get like the front desk pounding on the door.
You know, you have five minutes to get out of here.
(39:11):
I'm calling the cops and I'm in I'm in a
thong on the bed. There's a she's next to me,
you know, having dildo is ready to jam in my
eye sockets, and you know, ten other crew members and
stuff in there. There's plastic all around the bed. We
laid down so we wouldn't get blood all over the
floor carpet. Yeah, and we put a new bed sheet
(39:32):
on so we could just take that off. So we
got kicked out in the motel six. Oh man, we
shot we have we shot it somewhere else.
Speaker 1 (39:40):
But yeah, that's funny. Too bad that they didn't, like,
You're just standing there like what what what are we doing?
Got the dil doo thong that sounds like sounds like
a scene from like a My Christopher Guest film or something.
Speaker 3 (39:56):
They definitely thought we were shooting a porno and Roman
went up to talk to the lady at front desk
and apologized afterwards, and she said, if you would have
told me ahead of time, maybe it's just we've had
an issue with a prostitution here. Yeah, and so they
were really concerned about that.
Speaker 1 (40:13):
So you mentioned yet that your wife was helping you
with Wardobe and of course I met her. She lovely wife.
She came here with you and you guys appeared in
a twenty twelve episode of VH ones I'm married to
a And at the time she was adamant that you
didn't shoot straight porn, but you are shooting straight porn now.
(40:35):
So at the time and now that you're going into
straight porn and you're going to be having sex with women,
what are what boundaries do you guys have surrounding your
work and how do you how do you do that?
Speaker 3 (40:47):
Yeah, it's been it's been a process with Becky accepting it.
She sees, you know, for me to be you know,
mentally healthy, like I need that and I can't just
do do the gay porn, like the gay porn pretty
much pays for so I can do straight porn and
(41:08):
the gay porn pays so I can do independent films.
But mentally I need I need somewhat of a balance
and and I need more of that straight porn in
my life. And she knows that that it's it's strictly work.
There's there's no phone calls afterwards. It's we we film,
(41:28):
we give each other our footage, we we part ways,
we help each other market and and she has complete
access to all my devices and she helps out with marketing,
so she sees it's all it's strictly business. I mean,
there's there's no no feelings outside of of those that
mattress and and what's being filmed. So and and once
(41:50):
Becky was came on to came and enjoyed the A
v N. She sees the glitz and the glamour and
how much we're actually appreciated and and and the seriousness
of the business. And I helped her accept it too,
was coming and seeing all the wonderful people dressed up
and being appreciated at one of the biggest nights of
(42:13):
the industry.
Speaker 1 (42:14):
So do you think like initially it was easier for
her because obviously you're having sex with men, you're a
straight man, so like there's no threat there. And then
now that you and that, you know, maybe then you
see that I mean, once you're in porn, right, and
you're working in porn and you're around it, you see
it as like it's a business and these, you know,
(42:36):
intimate acts as much as they can be like intimate
and passionate at the time, and truly so are transactional
and you know, people are able to separate emotion from passion.
Do you think that that was helpful in her saying like, Okay, yeah,
this is a business, and now we're going to straight
porn and you're having sex with the gender that you prefer.
(42:57):
But now I've kind of had this, it's almost like
an easier introduction. Does that make sense.
Speaker 3 (43:02):
Yeah, it's definitely transactional, and she sees that, and she
sees how much work is put in besides that, the
hour of filming or whatever it is. I mean, I'm
not putting on a facade just to go have sex
with women, yea, because there's an hour of filming and
(43:23):
then with each video there's another twenty hours of work.
I mean, it's an all day thing for us. We're
both doing over forty hours a week. You know, each
of us probably together one hundred hours of work in
a week. It's much more enjoyable for me. And she
knows that. But she knows it stays. It stays in
(43:45):
that on set. It doesn't come off a set, and
most of the girls know heere now too, Like she
comes to the content houses. I was just at a
Richard Man and Jonathan Jordan content house the other day
with Team VP just last week, and they're all asking
where was Becky. They're like, where is she? Because she'd
come and help out. So she didn't make this last one.
(44:06):
But it's a great, great group of ladies that really
love Becky, and you know they miss her when she's
not around.
Speaker 4 (44:13):
What do you think is the biggest misconception that people
have about the adult industry in general.
Speaker 3 (44:18):
That we're all having some big orgy.
Speaker 1 (44:23):
You know. I had Grith Master on and he said
that before he got into porn, his biggest surprise was
he thought there would be more orgies. Oh yeah, he
was like, I thought, He's like, there's very like he
goes to these parties and he's like, there's no orgies.
What's going Everyone's like got their clothes on and they're
talking and they're like having drinks like normal people do.
(44:43):
He's like, I thought there'd be more orgies. And that
made me laugh because I think, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 3 (44:48):
I did see that episode and there's a good one.
I remember Grith saying that. But maybe if it's on
like the the hot wife's side a little bit, because
they came from a lifestyle into the.
Speaker 1 (45:02):
The monetizing a lifestyle as opposed to like, yeah, that's
kind of almost a reverse.
Speaker 3 (45:08):
Yeah, and that's different because I I'm not I don't
do that in my personal life. You know, we're monogamous,
and I'm I'm pretty I wouldn't say boring. But now
we have to plan. We have to plan sex, you know,
because you got to save that load.
Speaker 1 (45:27):
Yeah, even if you're using load boost, which does help.
Speaker 3 (45:32):
Yes, but you got you got to be you know,
your best on set. Yeah, and and and so let's yeah,
we have a day set for when we're going to
do it.
Speaker 1 (45:43):
And yeah, yeah, I definitely hear that from a lot
of people. So what are your big plans for this year.
Any projects coming up, I mean, obviously we've talked about
the movies, but anything on the like the adult side
that you're doing that you're excited about.
Speaker 3 (46:03):
Yeah, yeah, there's some A couple really great ones are
gonna be coming out soon and hopefully hopefully up for
nomination at the a v N. You got Transparrella. Okay,
that's a vampire one okay with Ariel Demir and Jim
Power shot that.
Speaker 1 (46:19):
Oh my god, So do you have like my favorite people?
Speaker 3 (46:23):
Oh yeah, Jim Jim, Yeah, they're so great, and that
I played Dracula in that, and an Aerial plays Transparrella.
I love that. So you got to watch that one.
That's gonna be good. And then Ariel has another one.
We just filmed it, but she's going to wait to
release it so it's not competing with Transparrella. So that
one's going to come out twenty twenty six. Avin. That's
(46:45):
called The Naughty Nanny. Okay, so it's like a fran dresser. Okay,
that's going to be And you got some amazing crew
and cast in that one. Pierce Paris popped in for
a little scene and down it's so yeah, it'll be
twenty twenty six for that.
Speaker 1 (47:05):
One, What are what's your favorite thing about working in
the adel industry?
Speaker 3 (47:10):
Having the freedom that I don't see other Americans have,
or other people just in general in the world not
living their dream and living somebody else's dream, having to
punch in and punch out, even though it may be
(47:31):
harder on my side, more ups and downs. I'm living
life on my terms. I'm doing it my way.
Speaker 1 (47:42):
Do you have any ideas for like how long you're
going to be performing for and do you have any
plans to move like behind the scenes or behind the camera,
because you know, we all know that performing is very
hard on men, and I think that like some people
don't realize that. They think, you know, I get DM
every day. You probably get them too. It's just it's fun.
(48:03):
You get to have sex with all these hot women
and like, you know, it's a blast, but it's actually
like it's tiring on the body for men and women,
but especially for men having to perform and you know,
the whole scene is writing on you. So do you
have like an idea of when you want to stop
performing and you want to move into something else?
Speaker 4 (48:23):
Are you just going to go until like you feel
like you've had enough.
Speaker 3 (48:29):
It probably come down to how I could survive monetarily speaking.
If if independent mainstream movies made enough for me to
live off of, then I'd spend more of my time
over there. But until then, you know, I got have
to eat. I got protein to buy, and flights and
(48:54):
managers and agents to pay and stuff. So if if
mainstream film, which I'm going to continue pushing towards and
hopefully things are successful with some of these titles coming
out here soon, if that paid more just enough to
live off of, you know, I'm not asking for much,
just enough to be able to pay mortgage and eat.
(49:16):
I do that because it's not like I'm as a
male performer. I'm not super rich. I'm no Sophie Rain.
Speaker 4 (49:27):
Yeah I was.
Speaker 1 (49:30):
I was on Instagram last night and I landed on
this account that I really didn't want to scroll through,
but I did, and it was called the Hollywood Fix,
I think, and it was just paparazzi footage of celebrities,
and I just like started doom scrolling, which is like awful,
And you know it's like Beyonce and like Jennifer Garner
and Lady Gaga and all these people basically being like
(49:54):
attacked by the paparazzi. It was like very invasive, and
I'm watching this thinking like Jesus Christ, what a But
Sophie Rain was on there like four times, and I
was like, is she that famous? But I think she
just puts herself in front of the paparazzi. She was
doing tiktoks on like the Hollywood Walk of Fames.
Speaker 3 (50:12):
Oh good, pr agent.
Speaker 1 (50:15):
Yeah, because I'd never heard of her before. You know,
she came out and said she made four million dollars
or something like that.
Speaker 3 (50:22):
A huge number. Yeah, huge, Yeah, it was. I think
it was forty three million or something, but.
Speaker 4 (50:29):
It was like four million in a month or something
like that.
Speaker 3 (50:31):
Could have been yeah, yeah, could have been. It's a
huge amount. Yeah, that might have been the yearly thing.
But if mainstream took over monetarily, that'd be good. Other
than that, like producing or directing on the adult side,
if I want to make more on that in the
adult industry, I'll probably have to do that.
Speaker 1 (50:50):
Because you have interested in doing that or is that
just something that you think that would make sense for
you to move into.
Speaker 3 (50:57):
I do have interest, and it would make sense because
I'm pretty good with with writing, good with acting, good
with orchestrating a production and doing the pre production. And
I can edit. I can There's there's so much I
you know, I can do. I can do it all.
So it would it would make sense and to make
(51:19):
more that might be a way I'm going to go.
And we're we're looking at some with Team VP and
mister Nuts. The other day he asked me to write
one missionary. Impossible.
Speaker 1 (51:34):
My favorite category AVN is clever Titles of the Year.
Speaker 4 (51:38):
Oh yeah, there's some like those are Yeah, that's.
Speaker 1 (51:41):
A really good one.
Speaker 3 (51:42):
I love. I love coming up with titles.
Speaker 1 (51:43):
Yeah, because there's there's some great ones in there. Yeah,
I love that.
Speaker 3 (51:48):
So I'll be working on some some bigger productions.
Speaker 1 (51:50):
Awesome. Well, thank you so much for coming on. Yeah,
I really appreciate it. I do have some questions for
you from my Patreon members, but we're going to do
that in its separate segments, which, of course, if you're
a member of my Patreon you can watch, but if
you're not, then you can't. And bummer for you, but
you can just go to patreon dot com slash Holly
(52:11):
Randall Unfiltered and sign up for like as little as
five dollars a month. It's not that much money, and
you can watch them there, plus watch these live streams.
So many reasons. Nick, can you tell everybody where they
can find you online? Nick?
Speaker 4 (52:26):
Domse Sorry yeah.
Speaker 1 (52:29):
Dom, can you tell everybody where they can find you online? Please?
Speaker 3 (52:33):
Yeah? You got dom Cruise dot com, Nick Dent dot com.
Those are those are the main ones. There's Reese rideout
dot Club, but yeah, check it out though you can
get to other places. I don't have to name off
twenty four no social underscore dash dash yeah dot.
Speaker 1 (52:50):
Dot just the ones that you that you want to push.
Are you starting a new uh? Did you start a
new of for dom Cruise? I'm assuming yeah, yeah, yeah,
yeah makes sense.
Speaker 3 (53:00):
Yeah, so of is dom Cruise.
Speaker 1 (53:03):
And you guys, of course can follow me on Instagram
and Twitter at Holly Randall. As I mentioned, join my
Patreon to support this show, go to hollylinks dot com
for access to all of my platforms. Thank you guys
so much for watching. Don't forget got to load boost
dot com ten percent off use code Holly at load
(53:26):
boost dot com or click the link in the episode
description and thank you load booth so much for sponsoring
my podcast. You guys have a good one and I'll
see you on the next one.