Rolling Stone
"Wild Thing"
June 6, 2002

Joe Francis has a gift. He can make more than half the girls he meets take their shirt off. He can make half of those girls take their panties off, too. He can make a straight-A student, prom queen, wife and mother-to-be go outside a club with him, lift her skirt and show him the goods. All it takes, Francis has found, is a camcorder and one magic line: “Do any of you girls want a T-shirt?”

The shirt is nice enough, a little white cotton tank with the logo of Francis’ company stenciled on the front in red: GIRLS GONE WILD. It’s a brand that’s become ubiquitous thanks to the late-night TV commercials selling the video series that Francis dreamed up. His company doesn’t release sales figures, but it’s been estimated that it sells 2 million tapes a year – 2 million hour-long looks at naked college girls set to bad club music, costing anywhere from $9.99 to $29.99 for the wilder “uncut” versions.

Girls Gone Wild videos might not be PBS documentaries, but they’re not hard-core pornography either. “A lot of guys aren’t turned on by nasty sex chicks with tattoos and piercings, and they’re not turned on by the airbrushed, unattainable Playboy girls, either,” says Francis, yelling to make himself heard over the din in a massive nightclub in Panama City Beach, Florida, in March. “What we offer are girls you can touch. You can touch our girls!” He laughs.

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