Are you ready to take oral sex to the next level? Author and sex expert Tristan Taormino shares the best tips and techniques to improve and enhance your fellatio skills. From the best positions for deep throating to tricks of facefucking and beyond, this guide will show you how to use your mouth, tongue, and hands to give your partner a mind-blowing orgasm. Then watch as three adult film stars show why they’re renowned for their oral skills as they each go to work on their partners demonstrating various techniques along the way.
You’ll learn:
• advanced positions for the adventurous
• how to deep throat him without gagging
• different styles of blow jobs
• the art of gagging and facefucking
• how to add rimming & prostate stimulation to your repertoire
Whether you have mastered the basics or you’re simply curious about what comes next, this movie will teach you some new tricks, inspire you to switch up your oral sex routine, and help make fellatio more than just foreplay.
Starring Adrianna Nicole, Satine Phoenix, Charley Chase, Evan Stone, Christian, Danny Wylde
Winner! 2011 AVN Award for Best Educational Release
Tristan Taormino is an author, columnist, editor, pornographic film director (and occasional actress) and self-styled "anal sexpert." She graduated Phi Beta Kappa with her Bachelor's degree in American Studies from Wesleyan University in 1993.
Taormino is the author of four books, including the Firecracker Book Award-winning The Ultimate Guide to Anal Sex for Women.
Taormino says about her sexuality, "I don't really identify with the label 'bisexual,' nor does it feel like it accurately describes me...I see myself as queer, since queer to me is not just about who I love or lust, but it's about my culture, my community, and my politics. The truth is, even if I were with a heterosexual guy, I'd be a queer dyke."
Taormino stated in an online interview, "I identify strongly as queer and as a dyke, because, as I have said before, it's not just about who I fuck and love, being queer is also about my politics, my culture, my community, and the way I see the world. People want to call me bisexual or pansexual or whatever, but I believe in people's power to self-identity."
In addition, "she describes herself as 'equal opportunity.' She doesn't like the word 'bisexual' -- it's too polarizing."