FORMER PORN STAR DROPS BOMBSHELL: The Industry Encourages Pedophilia
- 2 days ago
- 2 min read

A former porn star is sounding the alarm — and what she says she discovered inside the adult film industry is enough to make your stomach turn.
Brittni De La Mora, who once performed in adult films under the name Jenna Presley, is going public with a chilling claim: the porn industry is not just selling sex, it is deliberately feeding fantasies tied to extreme youth. And according to her, that realization was one of the biggest reasons she walked away for good.
De La Mora said she entered the porn business at 18 and quickly noticed something deeply disturbing. Producers were not simply trying to make her look attractive — they were styling her to look as young as possible. Think pigtails. Schoolgirl looks. An image built around innocence and youth.
That is when, she says, the horrifying truth clicked.
De La Mora now claims the industry was tapping into something much darker than ordinary adult desire. In her view, it was encouraging men to sexualize girls who looked underage, while hiding behind the excuse that everyone involved was technically an adult.
And yes, it is every bit as disturbing as it sounds.
Her story has all the elements of a jaw-dropping scandal: fame, sex, manipulation, and an insider now exposing what she says really happens behind the curtain. De La Mora says she spent seven years in the industry before leaving in 2012, and today she has completely transformed her life, becoming a Christian minister and outspoken critic of pornography.
But it is her description of the industry’s obsession with youth that is now grabbing the most attention.
For years, critics have blasted porn for becoming more extreme, more degrading, and more dangerous. De La Mora’s comments only pour fuel on that fire. She argues that porn is not harmless fantasy. Instead, she says it pushes people toward darker and darker material, normalizing things that should horrify any decent person.
And once you hear her describe how performers were packaged and sold, it is hard to unsee.
The bigger question her story raises is one many people do not want to face: why has “barely legal” culture been so profitable for so long? Why has the sexualization of youth become such a major marketing tool? And why are so many people willing to shrug it off as entertainment?
De La Mora’s answer is blunt: because the industry knows exactly what it is doing.
Whether readers see her as a whistleblower, a survivor, or a woman exposing a dirty secret hiding in plain sight, one thing is clear — her claims are explosive, and they are guaranteed to reignite the already raging debate over what pornography is really doing to culture.
This is not just a scandalous headline. It is a warning from someone who says she lived it.
By: Jill Hills



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