Platforms like OnlyFans and Fansly allow creators to act as their own directors, producers, and distributors, keeping 80% or more of their revenue and eliminating the need for predatory "auditions."
However, the most significant legal battle came in the late 2000s. In May 2007, he and his production company, , were indicted by a federal grand jury in Tampa, Florida. The charges were serious: five counts of using a computer server to sell obscene matter and five counts of delivering obscene matter through the U.S. Mail. The indictment alleged that the films met the U.S. Supreme Court’s definition of obscenity, focusing on content that portrayed "abusive sexual acts between adult males and females dressed to look and act like minor children". max+hardcore+casting+call+6
Little’s work was not merely explicit; it was characterized by a specific aesthetic of domination, vomiting, urination, and physical intensity that simulated abuse. This paper explores how the "Max Hardcore" brand pushed the envelope of the Miller test, provoking a federal response that culminated in one of the most significant obscenity convictions in recent history. Through this lens, we examine the tension between artistic freedom, commercial exploitation, and the state's role in policing morality. Platforms like OnlyFans and Fansly allow creators to
Modern production companies prioritize explicit, written consent checklists, standard medical testing (via systems like PASS), and the presence of intimacy coordinators on set. Little’s work was not merely explicit; it was