Why This OnlyFans Recruiter Quit and Turned to Jesus
By Movieguide® Contributor
Australia native Victoria Sinis started to work at OnlyFans to build her marketing career, but as she discovered the site’s dark intentions, she left the company and turned to Christ.
“I really didn’t have much knowledge about what OnlyFans was,” Sinis said. “I had never watched porn in my life, and even now, for a lot of people, there is still an enigma around OnlyFans. People think, ‘Oh, you can just sell your feet on there,’ or ‘I think it’s liberating.’”
“And so for me, I was like, ‘OK, these girls that were doing OnlyFans came from poor backgrounds and, on the surface level, it seems like they’re happy. It seems like they’re making good money, so this must be something positive,’” she said.
But once women reach a certain amount of subscribers, OnlyFans jumps in and hires contractors to imitate the woman and interact with subscribers. It also advertises the woman on social media.
“And then, as an agency, we had these things called levels,” Sinis said. “When you came into an agency, we told you what your baseline standard was.”
“The levels would range from things like bikini wear (level 1) to implied nudity (level 2) and full nudity (level 3). The higher the level goes, the more explicit the content,” The Christian Post reported.
Sinis started to feel convicted when she learned about custom requests. Fans can request women to do anything for their sexual gratification.
“Sinis began to feel disgusted and horrified by some of the subscribers’ demands, which sometimes included requests for girls to write things like ‘Slut’ on their stomachs. Some girls would be asked to write the subscriber’s name on a certain part of their bodies or to post pictures of themselves tied up.” The Christian Post reported. “Another request involving balloons made it apparent to Sinis that subscribers could make women appeal to all sorts of fetishes. A male OnlyFans customer once paid a girl to wear a specific type of sandal, blow balloons up to a certain size, and then stomp on them.”
“Some people may go, ‘Oh, that’s just a joke,’ but no,” Sinis said. “Someone paid good money, and they got sexually aroused by girls stomping on balloons. And it was so specific that it really disturbed me.”
But some of the requests are dangerous. Someone requested a woman to record herself hanging from a ledge while another woman stepped on her fingers.
“Soon enough, the video is not going to be enough,” she said. “And they’re actually going to want to put someone in danger or hurt them because they now need to act out this fantasy because we’re feeding into these sick and twisted requests.”
Sinis began to question everything and asked her co-workers questions.
“Some agency workers tried to assure Sinis that the platform provided people with a safe place to do porn, similar to how a heroine user may need a safe place to do drugs. Others, however, seemed to bury their heads in the sand, according to Sinis,” The Christian Post said. “The struggle of working for an OnlyFans agency grew, and it reached a point where she couldn’t even bring herself to open her laptop most days.”
She said she cried every day and wanted to do something good. So she thought of helping refugees.
“So, I was like, ‘Amazing!’ I’ll go away and help refugees, and then I won’t have to work for OnlyFans anymore,” she recalled. “I remembered the church I went to as a little kid had this refugee program, and I was like, ‘Oh, cool! I’m going to sign up for that, and all of the things will fall into place.’”
Sinis went to church as a kid, but her family didn’t practice following God and stopped going altogether when she was 10 or 11.
“When Sinis was around age 4, a pastor told the kids a story about a gunman threatening to shoot a woman unless she denounced Christ. The woman refused, and miraculously, the gun did not go off. The former recruiter didn’t know if the story was true, but she never forgot it,” The Christian Post said.
“I’ve always just had this thing in my heart,” Sinis said. “I never denounced God. There was always that underlying sense ‘I knew that God was real. I knew that God existed.’”
When Sinis reached out to her childhood church to ask about helping refugees, the church asked her to attend a service. When she went there in July 2023, Melinda Tankard Reist, a movement director for the anti-sexual exploitation group Collective Shout, spoke about how modern culture is hypersexualized and Christians are meant to be “salt and light.” She even highlighted OnlyFans as a dangerous website.
Sinis introduced herself to her and said, “Hi, my name is Victoria. I work for OnlyFans, and I hate myself.”
“She educated me on the reality of what it was,” Sinis said. “And that was on a Sunday. By that Friday, I quit the agency.”
Sinis worked for OnlyFans for five weeks altogether. She found a job at a café and began to share her story at schools, with Reist’s encouragement.
“One of Sinis’ speeches went viral on TikTok, and the advocate took the time to fast and contemplate what the Lord wanted her to do next,” The Christian Post said.
“The three-day fast led to the founding of Creating Gems, and now, Sinis speaks to girls about the reality of platforms like OnlyFans. The organization helps to educate young girls to ‘understand their intrinsic value, to understand they are made for so much more than to be ‘hot’ or to aspire to be an OnlyFans girl.”
Movieguide® previously reported on a woman who quit performing on OnlyFans and chose to build a life in Christ:
Former OnlyFans model Nala Ray said, “I can’t even tell you how much my life has changed since [finding faith]. Everything in my life has just kind of come to this room where I can now observe it and then be like, OK, so I don’t really want to do this anymore. I knew that this isn’t what God wanted me to do with my life.”
Ray also criticized OnlyFans and other adult websites.
“The ones who are glamorizing [this lifestyle] are men trying to run women’s lives and take a percentage out of it, and it’s horrifying,” she said. “It’s truly horrifying to be a woman and have men take a percentage of you showing your body on the internet. It’s just like having a pimp… It’s truly horrific that it’s being advertised in that manner, but it makes me want to fight all the more to help women understand that this is not where you want to go.”
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