Annie Knight’s shock admission amid new 2025 sex challenge
She’s known as “Australia’s most sexually active woman”, but Annie Knight has revealed a truth about her sex life that will shock you.
After sleeping with almost 650 men this year, Australia’s “most sexually active woman” has unveiled her next “challenge” – and it exposes a detail about her sex life she believes will shock people.
Adult content creator Annie Knight hit headlines in 2024 with her controversial Schoolies stunt that saw her flee Fiji in November.
But much earlier in the year, the high-profile sex worker embarked on a challenge to sleep with 600 people in 2024.
After surpassing her goal, she’s now revealed her next challenge, which she said has been set to help those who have been unable to have sex – a quest she’s motivated by after losing her virginity later in life than people would expect.
“A lot of people will be shocked to know that I didn’t lose my virginity until I was 19,” she told news.com.au.
“I felt that pressure so many people experience when they come of age. I was super shy in school, it wasn’t until I met someone that I just clicked with that I lost mine.
“For really shy and introverted people, they might never get the chance, that’s why I want to give virgins the opportunity to sleep with me.”
In total, Ms Knight said she’s aiming to sleep with 1000 people in 2025, an increase of 350 people from her previous target – and she’s hoping at least 500 of them will be virgins.
“I know a lot of people will wrongly assume that a virgin could only be someone young, but you would be shocked to learn how many people are 25-year-old virgins, even some 40 and 50-year-olds,” she claimed.
“There are a lot out there. I would never sleep with someone underage, 18 is always the minimum, but I think it will help people by offering this. I feel like I am giving these people an option to do it in a way that is controlled and safe.”
In response to critics of her stunt work, Ms Knight said she’s become accustomed to being “stigmatised” for being so public about life as a sex worker, and stressing she would never do anything illegal.
“I think people have these preconceived ideas about sex work and they are using high profile adult entertainers to back up their outdated views,” she told news.com.au.
“While people are generally becoming more accepting of sex work, the backlash shows that there are still an overwhelming number of people who think it’s ‘wrong’ or ‘dirty’.
“I’m choosing to do this, I’m choosing to sleep with this many people and monetise it. If you can’t accept that, grow up.”
Ms Knight had attempted to film explicit content with Schoolies graduates in Fiji after her friend and fellow OnlyFans star Bonnie Blue had her Australian visa cancelled, scuppering their original Gold Coast plans.
But after the pair relocated to a popular resort in Nadi during the annual student celebrations, Fiji’s Minister for Immigration, Pio Tikoduadua, said Ms Knight and Ms Blue were “prohibited immigrants” and deportation proceedings were commenced by local authorities.
The pair then fled before police could escort them from the country – but the cloud of controversy surrounding their antics hasn’t faded.
Activist and survivor Harrison James has continued to share his beliefs that the Schoolies stunt – and any involving young men who have just turned 18 – poses a genuine risk, despite her assurances regarding safety and consent.
“It raises significant ethical and safety issues, especially given the vulnerability of young men who are barely legal adults,” he told news.com.au.
“This lack of structure creates a heightened risk of coercion, exploitation, and uninformed decision-making.
“Many of these 18-year-olds are navigating their first steps into adulthood, and placing them in such a hypersexualised and monetised setting compromises their ability to provide fully informed consent.
“True consent is about more than legality; it requires emotional maturity and an environment free from pressure or manipulation.”
Despite the backlash, Ms Knight said she “really enjoyed” taking part in her sex challenges this year, insisting she had no idea it would become such a contentious issue.
“I had a feeling that the Schoolies thing was going to kick off and it would blow up, but I didn’t quite expect it to go as international as it did,” she told news.com.au.
“The more people that complain, the more attention we get, the more money we earn, so it doesn’t really bother me.
“My friends and family are all I really care about and they support what I am doing fully.”