After some digging, I had discovered that Tericka was in a dire situation, homeless and struggling to make some cash in order to eat and find a place to live. She also claims to have been affected (and not yet diagnosed with) Bi-Polar disorder and really only shot the movie in desperation for cash. We are working on obtaining the movies for your viewing pleasure and will let you know when available!

I did some digging and found some history on her. She went by the name Rikki Anderson and her biggest movie was Tight Ass by popular porn director John T. Bone. She was a stripper before shooting porn and shot many movies, mainly for John T. Bone. She started in the adult movies in 1997 and worked in them for two years, leaving in 1999 after performing in at least 19 movies. In her reviews, she was noted as a magnificent performer who never shied away from raw hardcore sex. Her performances included super charged threesomes, double penetrations and sultry lesbian scenes! Maybe her sob story was a crock of shit after all! She claimed to have only done a few movies but this is obviously not the case. Very Interesting, I am sure we have not heard the last from this! I have a feeling something big will come out of this, will she be making a cumback? I would love to hear your thoughts – give me some good feedback and I will reward you with bonus time on your account samsan@adultrental.com
A Big thank you to the several members who sent me this information, all of them have received 30 minutes free to their accounts! Members Allen, Leon, Scott, and Marcie each sent me bits of information and I thank them for it.
30 per cent of people with porn on their computers are women
Source - The National Post
MONTREAL -- Computers and the internet have revolutionized how we work. They have also brought new problems with them.
One of the biggest is pornography and how employers can limit what their workers watch on the Web.
It's a problem you can probably find in any building, on any floor.
In fact, one Quebec Company recently fired a director after an investigation found he spent about 6 hours a day, every day, downloading porn.
Private Investigator Claude Sarrazin conducted that investigation, and says it's not that uncommon -- one in three computers contains some sort of pornography: "70 per cent of the porn that is downloaded in North America is downloaded between the hours of 9 a.m. and 5 p.m."
It's numbers like that, which lead to companies setting policies or limits on use of the net at work.
It's a great tool, but there are plenty of distractions.
By some estimates, there are more than 4 million internet porn Web sites, about 12 per cent of net.
Add e-mail to that, too, and about one in 10 is porn-related.
Most people would assume that it's mostly a problem for male workers, but the stats say otherwise, according to Saul Carliner from Concordia University.
"What we find when we do a search of a business is that about 30 per cent of people with porn on their computers are women," he says.
Having a policy is one thing. Policing it is another.
Even as an employee, people still have some right to privacy.
But the biggest problem lies in what constitutes porn. What's offensive to one person, may be innocuous to another.
Helene Constantine is a technology lawyer and says that pornography has a very big grey area.
"We have nude images in the museum. Is that a bad thing? No. That's why standards become so important."
This may be a lot of things for companies to balance, but they may not have a choice.
One U.S. study estimates surfing at work costs their economy $250 billion dollars a year. Looking for pornography is the biggest chunk of that.
Lost hours at work aren't the only problem. Downloading porn also slows down companies' entire computer systems and opens them up to viruses and hackers.