The Four Lessons I Learned From Working At Europe’s Largest Porn Publishers

In the great British tradition, “obscene” material likely to “deprave and corrupt” left plenty of leeway for interpretation.

Maxine Page
11 min readMay 14, 2020

BB ack in the early 1990s, I worked for (what was then) the largest porn publishers in Europe and it taught me a whole lot about the sex industry, pushing boundaries, fetishes, interior decor, and well, people in general.

I stumbled across my new career pretty much by accident, after seeing an advertisement to work on a “radical” new magazine a company called Northern & Shell was launching . It was a porn mag for women, titled, imaginatively, “For Women”, which was purchased primarily — and not all that surprisingly — by gay men.

I grew up in a town called Maidstone, which is located in Kent, about an hour outside of London. I attended the local girls’ grammar school where at that time their primary aim was to prepare students for an unremarkable office-based career in insurance or banking — so it’s safe to say that porn maven wasn’t on the curriculum, but then I was never one to play by the rules.

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Maxine Page

Maxine Page is a Brit-born ex-tabloid editor who spent 16-yrs selling her soul to Hollywood. Now she travels, writes, paints & makes weird shit.