How trans women are getting ahead in the adult webcam industry
MEDELLIN, Colombia — Violeta and Gia Gomez were brothers by birth. Now they’re sisters by choice.
The siblings work together as adult webcam models in Colombia’s booming internet porn business, which offers trans women better jobs, higher salaries and safer working conditions than any other industry in the country. That may sound like a ludicrously sweeping statement to make, but the live cam industry is the only sector of the country’s economy that has opened its doors to trans women and welcomed them in.
Critics hate online porn for being exploitative and vulgar, but for a segment of the population that has been routinely exploited and violently marginalized forever, webcam jobs can seem mild by comparison. And it pays better than just about any other job available to them.
“I have a friend who finished all her schooling and was totally qualified to be a business manager but couldn’t get a job because she is a trans woman. Now she also works in webcams,” Violeta told me. “Many trans don’t get other work opportunities, so they take to the streets, look for work as a hairdresser, or become a webcam model, which has become the most normal job for us. We don’t get many other opportunities to grow economically.”
Violeta, who works under the screen name Violetqueen, cams on six adult websites from a studio in Medellin, one of Colombia’s two porn hubs. Between Medellin and Cali, Colombia’s adult cam industry employs some 30,000 models —including thousands of transgender women, according to industry leaders.
Violeta’s webcam studio, one of 400 in Medellin alone, employs 20 trans women, most of whom make equal or better pay than the female or male models. Violeta says she earns $5,000-$6,000 a month — an amount that would be unthinkable for a transgender person in any other legal line of work in Colombia. The 27-year-old used to work as a seamstress, earning a monthly salary that she can now haul in a single day of doing private shows on the web.
“It’s a lot better than being on the street and running the risk of danger. It’s better to work in webcams; it gives you more money and it’s much safer.” — Violetqueen
Violeta, who identifies as a “boy” in the house but a woman in public, thinks the only reason more trans women haven’t joined the industry is because they don’t have studio contacts or because they’re unaccustomed to working a regular job and would rather ply the streets.
But there’s also a lot of taboo around the industry, she says.
“People think it’s prostitution, but it isn’t,” she said. “Our mother was against this – we had to explain it to her.”