She’s not a fan.

When Victoria Sinis took a job at an agency that recruited for OnlyFans back in August 2022, the 26-year-old hoped to use her background in marketing to help women build their small businesses.

But the dream job soon turned into a disturbing nightmare.

“I really didn’t have much knowledge about what OnlyFans was,” Victoria Sinis told The Christian Post.

Exodus Cry/YouTube

“I really didn’t have much knowledge about what OnlyFans was,” Sinis told The Christian Post.

“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,’” she said.

“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 recalled.

Sinis’ job was to recruit women for OnlyFans — by finding women who posted provocative photos on social media.

She created a tier system for creators to categorize the women by how scandalous their content was and determine how high their payout would be.

Sinis began working for an OnlyFans agency in August 2022 after a friend suggested she use her background in marketing to help women build their businesses on the site — it quickly became a disturbing nightmare. REUTERS

Once a creator’s following became too large for them to manage themselves, the agency would step in, hiring people to impersonate the women in chats with subscribers to maintain and increase their earnings.

Level one originally began with women posing in their bathing suits. Level two was women implying nudity and level three was full-on nudity.

But Sinis suggested that level one show implied nudity — photos that might be banned on other social media sites — to help boost how much money the women would earn.

However, she claims she began to notice women being pushed to post things beyond their comfort level — with promises of more cash.

But what really made Sinis uncomfortable was the specific requests that men would submit to play into their sexual kinks.

The requests included asking girls to write things like “Slut” on their stomach, post photos of themselves tied up, wear a specific shoe, blow up balloons 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.” 

One man even wanted to see a woman dangle from a ledge as another 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.”

“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.”

victoria.sinis/Instagram

“When you pull on the thread a bit and think about the psychology behind it, you’re like, ‘Oh, wow. That’s really twisted.’”

Sinis eventually became so uncomfortable with what she was seeing on OnlyFans that she dreaded logging onto work and went back to her childhood church.

“I work for OnlyFans, and I hate myself,” she said introducing herself to the church’s speaker that day, who happened to work for the anti-sexual exploitation group Collective Shout.

A few days later she quit her job, working in a cafe cleaning toilets while she evaluated her life’s path.

Sinis later founded Creating Gems, an organization that educates 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.”

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