It would be irresponsible to discuss this keyword without acknowledging the grim context. Linda Lovelace was a victim of domestic and sexual abuse. The films she made under Chuck Traynor’s control, regardless of their titles, were not consensual performances.
Before achieving global notoriety in the 1972 feature film Deep Throat , Linda Boreman was subjected to the world of underground, 8mm silent adult films. These short features, known as "loops," were produced rapidly and distributed illegally for use in arcade peep-show machines.
Imagine a few frames of an obscure 1969 short resurfacing: grainy 16mm, a fringe-cinema title card, and a young Linda Lovelace before fame, thrust into a filmic undercurrent that would soon explode into national controversy. Small discoveries like Dogarama are time capsules — curious, unsettling, and oddly revealing.