






















OnlyFans is having a moment on TV.
Sydney Sweeney is making headlines with it on “Euphoria.” Elle Fanning is doing it on “Margo’s Got Money Troubles.” It also popped up on “Industry” and “Abbott Elementary.”
But Gracie Canaan, who is an OnlyFans creator and also co-hosts the “OnlyFantasy” Audible series about the topic, exclusively told Page Six that she thinks there is “danger” in “romanticizing this job as overnight wealth.”
On HBO Max’s “Euphoria,” Cassie (Sweeney) is shown filming fetish content for the platform, and making over $60,000 in a short period of time to send to her debt-ridden husband, Nate (Jacob Elordi).
Journalist Leon Neyfakh, who also co-hosts the “OnlyFantasy” Audible series, told Page Six that “the vast majority” of creators are “not making anywhere close” to giant sums of money.
“It can come down to luck, in some cases,” he noted.
The social media platform first launched in 2016. Today, over 4 million creators directly interact with their subscribers, or “fans,” by sending them pay-per-view content such as photos, videos and private messages. Many creators — but not all of them — post explicit adult material.
Digital sex work “can be just as dangerous as in-person,” Canaan warned, because when creators share explicit photos and videos, they’re “out there” in the world.
“People can use it to blackmail you,” she said, before quipping, “Wow, I sound like a ‘don’t do drugs’ PSA!”
“Euphoria” has gotten backlash for Cassie’s explicit content, such as dressing up as a dog and a baby, and mailing her used panties to her subscribers. Meanwhile, Apple TV’s “Margo’s Got Money Troubles” has addressed what can happen, as Margo (Fanning) attempts to do the work anonymously, only to be doxxed and find herself facing judgment from family and friends.
Canaan cautioned aspiring OnlyFans creators to “understand the risks” and to look at “all sides of it” before they “just look at ‘Euphoria.’ ”
Neyfakh, meanwhile, thinks OnlyFans is all over TV now because it has become “such a recognizable brand.”
“It’s like Xerox,” he said. “Everyone has a sense through osmosis of what it is.”
Canaan told Page Six that the platform “exploded” during the COVID-19 pandemic. At the time in 2020, “it was very much still considered something that porn actors do.”
It became more widely known to the average person in recent years, she explained, as the world entered “the height of parasocial relationships” online. “Economic uncertainty” has also pushed people to turn to the platform to make a living, as more traditional job markets shrink.
Now, TV shows like “Euphoria,” “Industry” and “Margo’s Got Money Troubles” have elevated it even further into the public mainstream.
Canaan told Page Six that the biggest misconception is “that everyone on OnlyFans is a dumb slut.”
In reality, she explained, “it is running a business. It is marketing, it is sales, it is strategy. I think people don’t understand the business savvy required.”
She added that most creators have a “persona.” Even if they’re posting “porn,” many creators “are partnered, or married, or have kids,” she told Page Six.
“This is another job. It can be really fun and rewarding … But, people don’t realize the mundanity,” she said.
Neyfakh was also surprised by what he heard from subscribers as he spoke to them for his Audible series. He learned “how big a part of their lives” OnlyFans can be.
“It’s a real outlet for people who don’t have access to romance in their lives,” he said.
But he noted that this can “go sideways” when subscribers form “unrealistic expectations” of what their relationship is with their favorite creator.
Start your day with Page Six Daily.
The relationships between subscribers and creators are “not real. And they’re real, at the same time,” he said, adding that the platform has “blurred that line” in a way “that I found surprising and fascinating.”
Several mainstream celebs have joined the platform in recent years, such as Denise Richards, “The Sopranos” star Drea de Matteo and “American Pie” actress Shannon Elizabeth, who reportedly made $1 million in her first week.
“The downside can be that it feels like celebrities are playing make believe in what is a lot of people’s very serious livelihoods,” Canaan told Page Six.
But she acknowledged that celebs using the platform also helps “destigmatize it.”
“Euphoria” has gestured at the idea that OnlyFans creators are “the new Hollywood,” and Neyfakh told Page Six that many of the creators he met share that mentality.
“I think that analogy works really well, because — as with Hollywood — lots of people go there with big dreams,” he said. “They think they can become the next Emma Stone or whatever … But it happens to very few people, actually.”
“OnlyFantasy” landed on Audible on May 21.
此内容由惯性聚合(RSS阅读器)自动聚合整理,仅供阅读参考。 原文来自 — 版权归原作者所有。