This spring break, ‘wild girls’ gone from Florida beach town

? “Girls Gone Wild” is turning its cameras on other destinations this year, and that’s just fine with officials who are trying to erase this city’s image as a bawdy, beer-soaked spring break capital.

“No matter how good spring break business is, having that brand on your head is not good,” Mayor Lee Sullivan said. “There is a difference between ‘having’ spring break and ‘being’ spring break.”

Sullivan is among those who are afraid that the party-hearty identity that attracts 400,000 revelers every spring will ultimately hurt the family vacation business as more aging, low-cost motels are bulldozed to make way for upscale condominiums.

A former police chief who favors cowboy hats and boots, Sullivan has waged a public campaign against the “Girls Gone Wild” video series for, among other things, furthering a raunchy image of this Florida Panhandle city.

Last year, he threatened jail to those who would ask young women to “go wild.” And he made good on that promise when the “Girls Gone Wild” producer and his crew were arrested on charges that included filming underage girls baring their breasts.

“I hope they have found some benefit from the exercise; we certainly have,” Sullivan said. “We have established that that type of entertainment is not welcome here.”

“Girls Gone Wild” features women exposing themselves at college campuses and events such as spring break and Mardi Gras in New Orleans.

Camera crews are focusing this spring on Daytona Beach, Miami’s South Beach, South Padre Island in Texas, and two popular Mexican resorts, said Bill Horn, spokesman for Mantra Films Inc.

The Santa Monica, Calif., company is owned by Joe Francis, the 30-year-old creator of “Girls Gone Wild” who made millions on the idea.

Francis may visit Panama City Beach this year, but only to face 43 charges that include racketeering, contributing to the delinquency of a minor, selling obscene material and using a child in a sexual performance.

Bay County sheriff’s deputies arrested him after the mother of a 17-year-old girl complained a crew had filmed her daughter and other underage girls.

Francis won an important pretrial argument when a judge found that photographing a female under 18 exposing her breasts without physical contact is not child pornography. Francis’ Los Angeles lawyer, Aaron Dyer expects the decision to undermine at least 90 percent of the state’s case. No trial date has yet been set.