‘Adaraneeya Kathawak’ (A Melody of Love) a musical movie directed by Priyantha Colambage has completed its shooting with final scenes filmed at a beautiful location in Belihuloya, Balangoda recently. Most of the shooting in this fourth directorial venture of award winning filmmaker Priyantha was done in Colombo and is undergoing its post-production at this stage. [...]
If you’ve browsed adult entertainment platforms or followed media commentary on parody production, you’ve likely stumbled across Hustler’s long-running This Ain’t… series — titles like This Ain’t Modern Family , This Ain’t The Walking Dead , or This Ain’t Stranger Things . At first glance, these are just X-rated parodies. But the phrase (a twist on their tagline) invites a sharper question:
Here’s a post that examines the phrase — breaking down what it implies about shifts in adult entertainment, mainstream media, and audience expectations. Title: Deconstructing ‘Hustler: This Ain’t Modern Entertainment and Media Content’ Hustler - This Aint Modern Family XXX - A Porn ...
But does “ain’t modern” mean retro? Not exactly. The production values, marketing, and distribution are fully digital-era. The attitude harks back to 1970s adult cinema’s anti-establishment punch — before porn became streaming category tiles. Of course, calling this not modern entertainment is marketing hype. The This Ain’t series relies entirely on modern IP, modern distribution (paid streaming, DVD-on-demand), and modern social media buzz. It’s not rejecting modernity — it’s exploiting it. The real message: Modern entertainment is so bland that even porn has to parody it to stay interesting. Bottom Line “Hustler: This Ain’t Modern Entertainment and Media Content” is less a statement of fact and more a provocation. It asks viewers to compare what they consume freely (Disney+, Netflix, HBO) with what they consume privately — and notice the absurdity of the line between them. Whether that’s insightful or just a sales pitch depends on how seriously you take a porn parody of The Office . The attitude harks back to 1970s adult cinema’s