This is either an incredibly smart idea, or a complete failure waiting to happen. 

Just like "Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom" isn't a realistic depiction of archeology, there's a 99.99% chance that hot coeds won't pay you for that pizza you just delivered with an hour-long bone-sesh. Most people can tell that the porn on the Internet isn't real (hopefully), but one woman is out to make sure kids these days know how things actually go down when people get funky. 

To combat "the creeping ubiquity of hardcore pornography" and the negative, skewing influence porn can have on people, setting crazy, unrealistic expectations for their own personal sexy times, entrepreneur Cindy Gallop created "Make Love Not Porn" and it brings up some valid real-world points about sex.  

You can check out her Ted Talk here where she describes why she hates the industry's take on porno, and she does make some decent points: 

The site also has a section where you can watch normal, everyday schmoes get nasty.

Sex in reality isn't waxed, shiny, well-lit and dramatic … and most people know that. But when this approach comes to a business model, it feels like the "everyone should be a vegetarian because it's better for the environment" argument — it's 100% true and everyone should do it, but it's never gonna happen. Never ever, no matter what. 

The premise of MLNP is that people pay $5 a month to watch videos of real people having unstaged, normal, healthy sex. And has anyone made any money? "Today, MLNP has neither failed nor achieved remarkable success," writes Alex Mayyasi. "Two years after its launch, it is in public beta and, according to Gallop, earns revenues in the low five-figures each month."

More than 400,000 people have signed up, and a slew of market indicators suggests that this type of action is poised to boom.

There are a few issues with this.

1) Do we want to watch Dr. Jones fill out paperwork, or punch some Nazis in the face? When looking for entertainment/distraction, most people would prefer the Michael Bay version of sex to the normal, everyday stuff.

2) Watching people "make love" feels somehow creepy.

3) Who pays for porn nowadays?

This idea seems crazy, but "low five figures" is a hell of a lot more money than we've ever made.