Jesus Christ Steiner aint looking to good..Looks like jail was hard on him..!
But hey Maybe you can be his face book friend..
PORN VALLEY—Paul F. Little, formerly Inmate #44902-112 of the La Tuna Federal Prison until late last January, and then a resident of a halfway house in Long Beach until June..
Hardcore spent almost exactly two years in one federal prison or another, during which time he took courses to rid him of his overindulgence in booze; then six months in the halfway house, where he had to regain his freedoms little by little.
"I was really punished; I really paid my dues here," Hardcore emphasized. "Not only was I sentenced to 46 months, which is comparable to what Dr. Conrad Murray was recently sentenced to, for assisting in the killing of a great public figure [singer Michael Jackson]. I got the same penalty and was fined nearly $100,000 all told, so I'm asking the distributors to get up and do the right thing and support me. They should do this for several reasons. First of all, it's the right thing to do; second of all, I took a bullet for the industry. I set the mark. We know now what you can do and what you can't do. Before that, a lot of people were doing similar things, but it was me that got busted."
I feel like I keep getting penalized," he added. "You know, the lawyers charged me a lot of money. I feel Lou Sirkin and his team, with Jennifer Kinsley, Jamie Benjamin and Daniel Aaronson, and of course my personal lawyer Jeffrey Douglas—I felt they did the best job that they could have done, but their hands are tied. When you're in court, they're so limited as to what they can do. They can't challenge the legitimacy of the law itself
Hardcore also provided some insight into what prison life was like for him.
"I'd like to say that this experience has been a benefit to me. Although day by day, it's not a pleasant experience, I made the most of the time I had to better myself in ways that really matter. I quit smoking and drinking,
and I reevaluated and readjusted my attitude towards things to get greater appreciation of life and love and other people's feelings and concerns.I spent half my time in the library, and people wrote in and I wrote back—another good thing: I got my handwriting back...
But I really got a lot of different interesting perspectives on life by being in there, by looking at life through other people's lives, and I realized that some of the things I was sure about, I was more sure of, I was more positive I was doing the right thing, and other things, I learned in prison to change my way of thinking, to help people more and to be more open-minded, to have more humility, more objectivity, be more caring and have more gratitude. And that's my goal right now: I want to see what I can do to help people, because I discovered, the more I help people, the more I help myself."
"I've had a long good career in this industry and the only regrets that I have, and I've many plenty of mistakes—the only thing I regret are the people I've inadvertently, unintentionally harmed, either physically or mentally. I sincerely apologize to these people. It was never my intention to harm anyone but when you're making a movie and the pressure's on, it's easy to push a little too hard sometimes, and I hope to never repeat doing that again, that's not my intention, because I want everybody to know I love people and help everyone that I can."
And what about the future?
"What I'd like to do is go beyond shooting adult movies and I'm exploring the potential to do work within the extreme sports categories similar to or just like X-Games, and also racing of all types, specifically auto racing—I've always been interested in that. I think there's a market for it. Certainly, with more and more channels available, there's a greater demand for content, and we're well-positioned as a production company to move forward. We've got the equipment, we've got the know-how and we've got the drive to succeed."
"This summer, I went down to the X-Games that were held downtown at the Staples Center, and I went to the U.S. Open of Surfing down in Huntington Beach, and I discovered there's a lot of opportunities available," he continued. "It's dominated by ESPN, of course, but there's opportunities for smaller production companies to do specialty pieces, I believe. We'll be moving into this directly. My approach to business is to work hard and keep pushing forward and accepting new challenges—the bulldozer approach—and I find when I do this that I discover new opportunities and I move into them, and normally we would discover things that are fun to do and pay very well, and that's our goal. We have to be profitable in order to continue."
And beyond that?
"Perhaps I'll hire someone to take over for me, groom a successor, somebody that can take over. The movies will never go away; they can stay in circulation into the unknown future here, and the mark, the brand is a registered trademark, so other products and services can be made and produced under the Max Hardcore trademark. In fact, I thought about apparel, and I thought a good name would be Max Hardwear, or a line of tools, Max Hardware—tools for work and tools for pleasure."
Anybody want to make a new Facebook friend?
Like we said: The new Max Hardcore. Those who'd like to contact him can do so by email, or they can visit his Facebook page, MaxHardcore100—the real one; not the scores of imposters who've used his name
Fuck thats kind of Pathetic..!