Let’s play a game of Spot the Difference, shall we? On one page, we have an OnlyFans model. On the other, we have a fast food worker. What’s the difference? Well, one probably has easier access to fries, but that’s about it. Both are just showing up to do the job of giving people what they want—the OnlyFans model just catches more judgment for it. Alina Rose recently did an interview in which she defended notorious OnlyFans stars Bonnie Blue and Lily Phillips. Both women host and participate in mass sex stunts to garner subscribers and record content for their OnlyFans pages, and both face quite a bit of judgment for their decisions. But at the end of the day… they’re both just meeting a demand that they didn’t create in the first place.
For example, let’s look at Phillips. She staged a mass sex event in the fall in which she had sex with 101 men in a 14-hour period. She later described the men who berated her for unrealistic expectations, but then proceeded with plans to work toward having sexual encounters with 1,000 men in a day. She was met with widespread criticism, not only for the way the stunt seemed to affect her personally—which is fair, Lily, take a breather please—but for her being portrayed as a temptress luring these men toward her den of iniquity. To that point, fellow OnlyFans content creator Alina Rose has risen to defend Phillips, saying that OnlyFans creators don’t do what they do in a vacuum—there’s a sizable audience paying money month after month for the privilege of witnessing Phillips and others undertake increasingly eyebrow-raising sex stunts. If consumers are going to be lining up to participate and then subscribe the way people line up for TVs on Black Friday, why wouldn’t content creators cash in?
The content creators who are doing the stunts aren’t the ones who built the circus—they’re just the ones showing up to juggle and sell peanuts. People love to shame content creators—especially women content creators—for pushing the limits while ignoring the very people who are paying to put on the show in the first place. The adult entertainment industry has always been driven by consumer demand and habits, not the whims and preferences of performers. If there’s a large group of people willing to pay thousands of dollars to watch someone swallow fire, then you’re going to have people showing up ready to drink down the flames and cash out. Don’t blame the people who show up to fulfill a demand they didn’t create—they’re doing the same thing you are: trying to earn a living in a world that’s getting more and more expensive to live in.
The real problem isn’t women making money from the objectification they’re going to receive anyway. If mass-sex stunts are degrading, then why is there such a demand for them that neither Bonnie Blue nor Lily Phillips find themselves wanting for partners to help them pull off said stunts? Why do we continue to criticize sex workers when we should instead be asking, who is paying for this shit? If you don’t like the content, don’t show up to consume it. Otherwise, why are you so surprised when someone decides to sell you what your habits suggest you’re really wanting?
This post was originally published on this site be sure to check out more of their content.