In the wild west of 2000s porn, nothing symbolized gonzo excess like Gag Factor.
Launched by JM Productions in 2000, it wasn’t about seduction or storytelling—it was about raw throat fucking.
Fans saw it as the pinnacle of gonzo escalation—each release upping the ante in how far throatfucking scenes could go.
It helped spawn the “deepthroat bulge” craze.

Retailers dropped it, distributors got spooked, and the brand’s once-profitable DVDs was almost nowhere to be found.

By 2011, Gag Factor 34 rolled out quietly, the last gasp of a franchise that once defined gonzo throatfucking.
The legal cases gave moral cover, but the truth is porn will keep selling anything—if the numbers are there.
While we're on the subject, for those of us who love a good throat fuck session, we have a thread about who the best throat queen providers are.

Launched by JM Productions in 2000, it wasn’t about seduction or storytelling—it was about raw throat fucking.
From Cult Hit to Industry King
Gag Factor racked up over 30 volumes, snagged AVN trophies in 2003 and 2004, and carved out a massive fan-base.Fans saw it as the pinnacle of gonzo escalation—each release upping the ante in how far throatfucking scenes could go.
It helped spawn the “deepthroat bulge” craze.

The Legal Chokehold
But even porn has limits. In 2006, the feds came knocking. JM Productions and distributor Five Star got hit with federal obscenity charges—Gag Factor 18 named among the offending titles. JM wriggled out of the case, but Five Star’s 2008 conviction made one thing clear: this stuff wasn’t just risky—it was radioactive.Retailers dropped it, distributors got spooked, and the brand’s once-profitable DVDs was almost nowhere to be found.

The Market Collapse
Then came the real killer: tube sites. Free streaming decimated DVD profits, piracy ran rampant, and niche series/sites that once made fortunes were going out of business.By 2011, Gag Factor 34 rolled out quietly, the last gasp of a franchise that once defined gonzo throatfucking.
Why It Really Died
Gag Factor didn’t die because it was "too extreme". It died because it stopped making money. Once the risk outweighed the reward, the industry abandoned it.The legal cases gave moral cover, but the truth is porn will keep selling anything—if the numbers are there.
While we're on the subject, for those of us who love a good throat fuck session, we have a thread about who the best throat queen providers are.

