Rule 34 is a popular Internet meme that asserts: “If it exists, there is porn of it. No exceptions.” A visit to WoodRocket.com is enough to convince anyone of the truth in that.

In Simpsons XXX, performers covered in yellow body paint grunt and moan through scenes while attempting to stay in character as Marge and Homer. A photo gallery called “An Orgy of Bill Murrays” features actresses (partially) dressed up as some of Murray’s most beloved characters: Picture a lithe young woman wearing a Steve Zissou hat and beard—and nothing else. Lee Roy Myers, one of the site’s founders, is responsible for pornographic parodies of everything from Game of Thrones and Dr. Who to The Hobbit and Bob’s Burgers (Game of Bones, Dr. Whore, Bob’s Boners, and The Knobbit, respectively), and he always has a new delightfully depraved production in the works.

Porn parodies based on popular culture are certainly nothing new. These ribald romps peaked in the ‘90s, decreased in popularity as porn moved away from DVDs and towards the web, then saw a resurgence in the mid-aughts with films like Brady Bunch XXX and Who’s Nailin Paylin? That rise in popularity happened to coincide with Myers’s career path. After various stints in porn, traditional media, and working as a TV executive for Pay-Per-View, New Sensations asked him to produce a film with mainstream comedic sensibilities that would be set in an office in “Porn Valley.” He seized upon the moment parodies were having and created a pornographic version of The Office. Myers then went on to shoot 30-40 films for New Sensations, most of which were parodies.