Perspective: OnlyFans’ soft prostitution is ruining lives in real time - Women who have left the platform are speaking out and say the money isn’t worth the degradation

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By Jennifer Graham Article Archive

Run by a Ukrainian-American businessman who has been called a “porn baron,” OnlyFans peddles lascivious content made by amateur “content creators.” It has been hailed as a form of “female empowerment,” giving women a chance to “own” the adult content that they create and share via subscriptions.

But at the root of this scheme is a vast income inequality frequently decried by the left when it’s the byproduct of other forms of commerce. The majority owner of OnlyFans made more than $1 million a day in 2022; the platform takes a 20% cut of what its creators make.


The platform trumpets the six- and seven-figure earnings of its superstar “models.” But Gail Dines, the founder and president of the anti-pornography organization Culture Reframed, says the typical OnlyFans content creator makes between $150 and $160 a month. Only Dines doesn’t say “content creators.” She rightly says “exploited women.”

Her organization recently released a report on OnlyFans which pushes back against the platform’s insistence that it exists to empower “creators to own their full potential.”

“OnlyFans does not advertise itself as a pornographic marketplace. But porn is the reason it exists,” the Culture Reframed report said. But you don’t have to take Dines’ word for it. Recent news accounts show lives are being ruined in real time on the platform.

Part porn, part prostitution?​


Last year, a teacher in Arizona lost her job after filming for an OnlyFans account on school grounds; her husband, a substitute teacher, lost his, too. More recently, a former OnlyFans creator who was making $20,000 a month spoke to Business Insider about quitting the platform, saying “It got to the point where the money wasn’t worth it.”

In a “as-told-to” interview published by Business Insider, the woman said she’d started an account on the platform at age 18 and used it for three years. Since she’d already been posting photos of herself in a bikini on Instagram, she saw OnlyFans as a natural extension of that, except that she’d be paid.

She didn’t take into account the difficulties human beings often have reaching satiety — whether in food, the acquisition of money, or other desires.

No matter how much money she made, she said, she wasn’t satisfied. And no matter how racy the content she provided, subscribers wanted her to go further. She said she occasionally took money for nude photos “even though I didn’t want to, because I felt so pressured” by the cash incentives.

Similarly, model and actress Blac Chyna (whose real name is Angela White), quit OnlyFans after becoming a Christian, calling the OnlyFans experience “degrading.”

“It is one of those things where I did what I needed to do at that moment because of the circumstances I was in,” Chyna said in an interview earlier this year.

These comments peel back one of the many problematic layers of OnlyFans: in this case, the platform’s appeal to people who are struggling financially.

“The women (on OnlyFans) are poor and desperate, often to put food on the table; a lot of them are from eastern Europe or the global South; and their bodies are being commodified and monetized by OnlyFans,” said Dines, professor emerita of sociology and women’s studies at Wheelock College in Boston.

The exploitation of the desperate, of course, is an old sin in the field of “sex work,” which used to be known as prostitution. In Victor Hugo’s “Les Miserables,” Fantine sold her body and her self-respect because of circumstances she was in, circumstances that “adult” industries of all kinds are happy to exploit.

The new thing is how easy OnlyFans makes it.

A mom can create and upload sexually explicit content while children are asleep in the next room, dreaming of wealth she and her family will likely never see. She can chat with a subscriber, hoping for a tip, while having her morning coffee. “Chat,” like “sex work,” is a euphemism; most OnlyFans subscribers call it “sexting.”

“I would call it where porn and prostitution meet,” Dines told me.

While OnlyFans has controls that are available to its creators — the fired teacher said she had blocked everyone in Arizona from seeing her account — Dines said that it’s impossible to contain the “porn ecosystem” in which different outlets support each other. As we spoke, she called up the PornHub website and found 72,650 videos that originated from OnlyFans. And while content is supposed to be for subscribers, there is nothing to stop subscribers from making recordings and screenshots and publishing them elsewhere. And the emerging reality of artificial intelligence means images and videos could be distorted and manipulated to display things that were never intended or never happened.

I found one article published by an alternative-weekly newspaper in the Northeast that rated the platform’s “Girlfriend Experience” and displayed screenshots of OnlyFans creators in which their faces were clearly visible — as well as other body parts that are usually concealed.

“For just $3 a month, you can access her more than 1,100 pics and videos,” one accompanying review said.

‘Winks and nods’​


Any discussion of the morality of such work is often scorned as “moral panic.” But given the compulsive nature of pornography for many users and its harmful effects on child development (now children are being exposed at ever younger ages), the sly mainstreaming of sexually explicit content is not as benign as the platform wants us to believe.

According to Variety, OnlyFans had more than 3 million creators as of November 2022, and more than 238 million subscribers.

To be fair, not every creator is selling pornographic content; on X, the platform promotes the accounts of comedians and motocross drivers, for example. And OnlyFans once sought to rebrand itself, announcing in 2021 that it would no longer host explicit material on the website. The website then later reversed its decision.

It’s worth noting that it’s not just people critical of OnlyFans who describe its content as primarily sexually explicit, but publications like Variety and The New York Times, where one writer said in 2021, “every assertion that the site isn’t powered by porn is accompanied by an onslaught of winks and nods to the contrary.”

Less discussed in the public conversation about OnlyFans is actually what the “content creators” are creating, and at whose expense. But we get a glimpse in the recent news stories.

Per CBS News, reporting on the fired Arizona teachers, “Samantha Peer said she and her husband resorted to filming and selling adult content because their pay was too low and they were struggling to make ends meet.”

The former OnlyFans creator who spoke to Business Insider said the platform seems like “a path to self-sufficiency” and spoke of having grown up poor, saying, “I didn’t grow up with much money. As a kid, I was made fun of for having a rundown car and a small house. I think that instilled a desire in me to make money as an adult and prove myself. It felt like money would be the answer to all my problems, but it wasn’t.”

Meanwhile, there are young women still using the platform who have yet to discover that although men cannot physically touch them on OnlyFans, they know how to take a screen grab. And these images will live forever on the internet — long after they, too, have realized the money was not worth the degradation.
 
Others have likely already mentioned this, but the e-whores who make livable incomes are statistical anomalies. Selling your ass online was much more viable when it was much rarer in supply and more niche. Now that sexual content is ubiquitous, its value has plummeted to that of a Zimbabwean dollar. For the ones promoting their OnlyFans profiles on platforms like Twitch, Instagram or TikTok, the vast majority make supplemental income at best and poverty wages all too often. The average OnlyFans girl could hope for, at most, 100 dedicated subs if she actively promotes herself online. Assuming those are all legitimate subscribers and not bots, an OnlyFans girl can expect to gross $1600 every month at the absolute most. Assuming those subscribers keep their memberships at $20 a month and either don't cancel or upgrade their memberships to $50 for three months (or however she chooses to sell her subscription services), she can expect to gross $20k a year tops. Of course, we're not accounting for tips, pay-per-view (PPV) content and other streams of money which could add more to the gross, and what she actually nets is another equation entirely. Even in entirely ideal circumstances where some are allegedly bringing in six figures, an OnlyFans "career" is an entirely time-limited offer. As the girls age, their subscriber counts will go down and they'll have to find work elsewhere.

Those that have their heads screwed on keep their expectations reasonable as they likely have normie-tier jobs and keep a strict boundary of separation between their sex life and public life. They probably produce some basic sexual content with them and their significant others and take home disposable income for vacations, small luxuries or unexpected expenses.

Want some stats? Read this: https://variety.com/2022/digital/news/onlyfans-financials-earnings-creators-1235357264/
>OnlyFans creators earned $3.86 billion in 2021, an increase of 115% from the year prior, bringing the company’s payments to creators to more than $8 billion since its 2016 founding. Gross revenue (i.e., fan payments net of taxes) also more than doubled, to $4.8 billion, for the year ended November 2021. OnlyFans creators keep 80% of the revenue generated by their accounts, with the company taking a 20% cut.
>The number of creators on the platform increased 34% last year, to 2.16 million, while the number of OnlyFans users jumped 128% to 188 million. There are 2.16 million "creators," and they collectively earned $3.86 billion in revenue. That works out to $1,787 per creator per year, or just $148 per month. Even that is misleading, as the biggest earners massively skew the mean. The median is undoubtedly a tiny fraction of that.
>In 2021, model and TV personality Blac Chyna was the top-earning creator on OnlyFans, pulling in an estimated $20 million per month, according to research service Statista. Actor-singer Bella Thorne took the No. 2 spot with an estimated $11 million per month, followed by rapper Cardi B with $9.34 million per month, according to Statista.


Literally just those three creators rake in $40 million per month, or about $480 million per year of the $3.86 billion total. That’s more than 12% of the total, for three whores out of more than two million.

As to why "sex work is work" and prostitution has been so steadfastly glamorized in leftist circles, it's because finding work is difficult for the average westerner. Entry-level jobs are are becoming fewer and further between, and reorienting the economy towards service jobs has placed a massive amount of people simply unfit for those positions in massive amounts of debt no thanks to the educational inflation and the subsequent credentialism crisis. Of those that are capable, working in an office and all the politics that come with it are arguably worse than selling your ass online. Busting your ass in a kitchen under intense pressure is even worse. Working dispatch as a 911 operator is even more stressful. Selling your ass for cash from the comfort of your own home is the definition of low stress and low skill.

There's a reason why "Office Space" was so popular. We've all heard stories of office workers suffering from a range of mental illnesses or just are under duress all the time. It grates on your soul when your manager refuses to honor your work with better pay, ignores your overtime and even straight up tell you to break labor and work safety laws. It's degrading if your work is 99% of the value of what your company sells and you get half as much as the manager who's job is to write 2 emails per day. It's degrading if you get fired because management made bad decisions that cost the company a lot and they let you go despite none of it being your fault.

I can't say I pity these whores when they behave just as predatory towards their johns, but at the same time, I can empathize with how some wound up where they are. It's all in all a fucked set of circumstances, for lack of better words.
 
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