Sorry For Asking with Adam Ramzi and Cole Connor

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Sexuality #114

"Sorry For Asking" brings together longtime friends and award-winning gay adult film performers, Cole Conner and Adam Ramzi, to ask all the questions (and they mean that literally). From talking shop to sharing stories about their experiences in porn, "Sorry For Asking" podcast will give you a behind-the-scenes look at the life and reflections of queer adult content creators. Between their conversations and the parade of guests that will join them, "Sorry For Asking" will ask all the sexy questions you were too afraid to ask. "Sorry For Asking" will make you not sorry for tuning in! Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/sorryforasking/support

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Recent Reviews
  • Myles Raw
    One of the absolutely fabulous podcast/Youtube series
    Funny, informative and THIRSTY! It’s wonderful to watch Adam and Connor on YouTube for their most recent podcast and good to hear their archived podcast on here. I wish all of their podcasts would available to watch but either way you devour it it’s worth your time to learn more about the sexy men and the adult gay content community at large!
  • micnacawriter
    Fun and educational
    This is not just fun but educational. Porn increasingly sets the standard for how people maybe especially gay men think they should have sex. This podcast reveals that what we see on screen is often not natural (I mean the positions) and hard work for the models and rarely can be recreated by civilians. Adam and Cole are intelligent and have great chemistry.
  • bigsexyboogie
    Entertaining and Informative
    I highly recommend this podcast.
  • bjdmagic
    Love!
    Adam and Cole bring so much charm and fascinating content to this podcast. In addition to showing the fun and flirty side of the porn industry; they also remind us of the humanity in being a sex worker.
  • RoadTripper
    Surprisingly thoughtful and intelligent!
    I went in expecting a funny podcast about pornography and instead found an insightful, empathetic interview podcast with a dynamic and facinating guest. I was entertained and walked away having learned a lot about porn, trauma, and the very real issues facing our society in 2023. Bravo gentlemen, keep ‘em coming.
  • XKL777FGS
    Disappointing
    I know hard work goes into every podcast so it troubles me to say Sorry for Asking is such a disappointing podcast. But that’s how it is for me when I consistently feel I have wasted 50 minutes of my life and want to stop listening...however, I like the guest and keep hoping something interesting will be said to make it worth it. But that never happens. Sorry for Asking repeatedly fails, particularly when compared to podcasts like the Rialto Report which is the gold standard for sex worker podcasts. Sex work is such a rich topic for content but Sorry for Asking fails time and again. I believe good hosts who treat topics with intelligence and humor—and do their research—can provoke fascinating stories and elevate the guest. Even if that fails, they can be engaged and try listening to their guest and responding. That does not happen here. Simply because the two hosts are sex workers does not qualify them to carry a podcast. In fact, the hosts drag the guests down. First and foremost, they are bad listeners. There are numerous opportunities for follow up questions and mining deeper but the hosts are intent on sticking to the script and generally giggling. Adam Ramzi seems competent but is overly concerned with being respectful—he never utters the word “sex worker”—which is what the hosts and guests were or are. Instead the hosts overuse the term “creator” presumably because it adds respectability to their Just For Fans / Only Fans / Twitter content. (Meanwhile, no listener/fan was seeking this respectability—none of us doubt it.) Ultimately, Ramzi’s caution squeezes every opportunity for depth and humor out of the podcasts. Meanwhile, Cole Connor giggles incessantly and upspeaks until you want to turn the volume down. I do not know if it is a persona he adopts or not, but he seems completely vapid. The episode with Wolf Wolfgar (Dads Need Daddies) was a new low. Wolfgar is an interesting performer but Connor has a childlike understanding of the geography of Canada—which immediately takes you out of the moment as you marvel that someone does not understand the difference that Montreal and Vancouver have a huge mass of land between them. Then, neither Ramzi nor Connor brought up Wolfgar’s most popular and well-known studio movies. While we hear a little bit about Wolfgar’s upbringing, his American boyfriend, and why he stopped making studio movies there were ample opportunities that were missed to mine these topics further…because the hosts were busy being overly sincere (Ramzi) or breathy (Connor). They also do not seem to understand their audience—the joke about “for the moms in the audience, we’ll explain what this term means”—was never amusing and got positively deadly after the third time it was said in the same episode. No one listening to this podcast needs definitions, and if we did we would Google them. There is hope for this type of podcast—I would say one host would be plenty—but Sorry for Asking is not the answer.
  • joel ch
    Meh
    For two pornstars they sure have backward views when it comes to things like cheating like blaming the person who was cheated on in the relationship. This comes after a conversation about establishing boundaries in a relationship with people in the industry. Lol what??
  • moomoo64212790
    Terrific podcast
    Keep up the good work, boys.
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