MIKE SOUTH is a multiple AVN Award-winning producer and director of adult videos. He has been shooting in XXX for over 20 years. For ten years now, he has written and maintained the website MikeSouth.com, which is the longest-running news and information website in the adult business. Beholden to no one, MikeSouth.com is where the adult video industry turns for the most timely and accurate news reportage, in-your-face criticism and commentary. Mike is the world-renowned director of such classic pro-am adult series as Mike South’s Southern Belles, Mike South’s Georgia Peaches, and Mike South’s Confederate Cuties, as well as the websites SouthernBukkake.com and StripperFacials.com, and he has discovered and helped to launch the careers of adult film stars such as Midori, Anna Malle, Kayden Kross, Felicia Fox, Anastasia Blue, Sana Fey, and Melissa Hill. His glamour photography has graced the pages of dozens of adult publications, including Hustler.
TIM CASE is a writer, a DJ, an ordained minister, and a nerd at heart. He had never stepped foot inside a gentleman’s club when he met his future wife - at the time, he was a 29 year old team leader for an overnight freight company, she was 20 and a rookie forklift driver. Later, after they fell in love and she began performing under the name Felicia Fox, the two found themselves touring all over the country and living in the San Fernando Valley, where she found a large measure of success in the world of XXX. Totally supportive of her new career, Tim handled all of his wife’s scheduling, travel, and PR needs, dealt with her various agents, wrote for a number of adult industry websites and magazines under a variety of pen names, and worked in various clubs as a disc jockey. He became, in industry parlance, her “suitcase pimp”. Together, the two co-hosted “Lust for Life”, a weekly adult-oriented talk show which ran on KSEXRadio.com for several years. Tim later took over as General Manager of the Flamingo Showclub in Dayton, Ohio in 2005, and managed the club until December of 2010. He now writes for the Dayton City Paper, and occasionally DJ's.