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Romp.com

The Romp
Industry Comedy website, softcore pornography
Founded April 2000
Defunct 2005
Headquarters Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Key people
Eric Eisner, Bruce Forman
Number of employees
  • 35 (spring/summer of 2000)
  • 14 (fall of 2000)
  • 11 (summer of 2001)
Website Romp.com archive

The Romp (also known as Romp.com) was a Los Angeles-based entertainment website that specialized in original flash animation videos and games. It began operations in April 2000 and closed in 2005. The website was founded by Bruce Forman and Eric Eisner, son of Michael Eisner. The site was known for its raunchy, politically incorrect content, and its target demographic (described by Eisner as "people who watch South Park, listen to Howard Stern and read Maxim) was males age 16 to 25.

Eric Eisner and Bruce Forman met at UCLA's Anderson School of Management, where they both earned their MBA degrees in June of 1999. They got the idea for a site targeting young men during their final months at UCLA. Eisner and Forman were 26 and 28 respectively when they put up the initial seed money for Romp.com in 2000 and followed that by drawing in $15 million from private investors. The site attracted nearly 200,000 users during its first six weeks and boasted 35 employees (downsized to 14 in the fall of 2000. By March of 2001, Romp.com had 600,000 registered users. Romp.com started a subscription service called "The Romp Mafia" in March 2001, attracting 11,000 subscribers in its first three weeks.

Romp.com was primarily known for its flash animation video series. The site also featured message boards (called "spew boards"), chat rooms, and softcore images of women. Some of Romp.com's web series included:

Romp.com quickly began to expand from the web to a full-fledged entertainment company. In the fall of 2000, Romp.com signed a development deal with Mandalay Sports Entertainment to produce reality game shows. Two projects developed by the company include Peephole, which involved people on the street being offered money to do outrageous things while contestants bet on how far the people on the street will go to get the money, and The Hunt, which followed contestants on a cross-country scavenger hunt, but neither made it to the air.

Romp.com signed a deal with H&S Media to create a mini-magazine of repurposed content to accompany H&S's Maxim-esque men's magazine The Edge. Romp.com was in final talks with H&S to create a standalone Romp magazine, but that never came to fruition when H&S went bankrupt in fall of 2001.


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