play
Show Caption

The All-American Rejects frontman Tyson Ritter wants to bare it all.

The lead singer of the emo pop-rock band is starting an OnlyFans, he reveals. He’s coy on the details, though, telling GQ in an interview published June 4 that fans can “expect full-frontal rock and roll with all access” on the risqué content site.

“The All-American Rejects are behind me doing it, and it’s really nice to be supported by my band in this wild adventure of 2025 for us,” Ritter said, noting the band’s viral house party shows and new album have put a battery in their back. “I don’t think anybody would have expected the All-American Rejects to make a ripple in the water ever again.”

Ritter previously told USA TODAY that their house party tour – a string of impromptu concerts in everywhere from backyards to barns – started as a “rite of passage moment” shared with University of Southern California students.

“It feels incredible and indescribable right now. It’s from this hope to have something to say again as a band and present to an audience we didn’t resonate with anywhere but radio and MTV,” he said. “To be able to put out new music and find our footing as a band with this activation, I’m so beside myself with gratitude.”

The momentum has inspired a unique way of getting more plugged in, with OnlyFans.

“The excitement behind this whole thing is like, ‘Where else can we be disruptive?’ We’ve always been a band who’s got a tongue bursting through the cheek when it comes to our music. So why not …” he told GQ, making an explicit joke suggesting the page would include nudity.

But Ritter doesn’t actually suggest NSFW content would be included in his subscription; instead, he seems to be offering a way for All-American Rejects followers to connect with the band unfiltered and outside of traditional platforms, including concerts and social media.

“It’s a platform that is offering an experience where the artist can set the price, and it’s artists-to-fans,” Ritter told the outlet, highlighting OnlyFans’ innocent start before explicit content took over. “There’s no middleman, there’s no subscription costs.”

As for Ritter’s account, “maybe you’ll pay 69 cents just because we’re little cheeky cats.”

The singer lamented the price of being a music fan today.

“Some of these concerts are like $300, and then in order to get the closer experience, the tier system goes through the roof,” Ritter said. “We’re not trying to offer a VIP meet and greet that you just empty your account and max out a credit card. I heard some people have credit cards now just for their concert expenditures. Like, what … ?”

The frontman appeared dismayed by the state of hyper-commercialization in music.

“When art becomes content, you are commodifying inspiration, and you are destroying our culture by not sincerely approaching your gift,” he said. “All I can do, as the elder statesman, man, is just sit back and say, ‘How can we scream in this vacuum for the kid in his garage?'”

Contributing: Melissa Ruggieri


This post was originally published on this site be sure to check out more of their content.