‘Married boss’: Adult stars reveal their ‘strangest’ subscribers
From work colleagues to family members, some followers have definitely raised eyebrows for these racy content creators.
Four adult content creators have detailed the strangest people who have followed them on a popular X-rated subscription site.
As they build their following and make millions selling racy content of themselves, there have been a few subscribers who have raised eyebrows along the way.
For Sydney-based model and porn star Katija Cortez, finding out a married manager at her accounting firm followed her came as a massive surprise.
“I found out through another former colleague,” she tells news.com.au.
“He had apparently told a few colleagues that he had subscribed to my account.
The married manager
Ms Cortez then did some detective work and confirmed it was him after seeing his account username and Instagram handle were the same.
“He was talking to me and buying stuff from me,” she reveals, referencing the platform’s feature to pay for bespoke content.
But it turns out she didn’t mind the attention and actually got a kick out of the fact he followed her.
“I was flattered because I always thought this manager was cute, and it was a shame that he was married,” she admits. “He clearly thought I was cute too!”
The cousin
Sharna Beckman from the Gold Coast also discovered someone odd among her subscribers – her cousin – who had been secretly following her account and purchasing spicy videos from her.
He’d been subscribed for over two months before she recognised his name among her fans and confronted him about it, which is when he gave an unbelievable excuse.
“He tried telling me that it wasn’t him and it was actually his friend, who was married, so couldn’t use his own name or credit card,” she explains.
“My cousin apparently kindly offered to share his name and credit card to allow this other guy to join my page!”
She says she felt “sick to my stomach” and too embarrassed to tell anyone about it.
“I didn’t want to cause any awkwardness between the families,” she says, “So, I removed my cousin from my account and blocked his phone messages.
“I just don’t get why he would subscribe in the first place and then use his real name. Like, did he want me to know it was him? And then what?”
Sharna and her cousin, now in his thirties, were close as kids growing up, catching up with one another as adults at family get-togethers.
The pilot
For former flight attendant Alanna Pow, her strange subscriber was a pilot she worked with.
“The days were so long, sometimes 14 hours, and I’d work up to 140 hours a month, earning only a $49,000 salary,” she says. “My fun colleagues would make jokes saying that I should make an account.”
“I thought it was worth trying,” she says. “When I finally did make one, one of the pilots I used to fly with started always rostering me on when he was flying.
“He made it pretty clear he was subscribed to me, and I didn’t really mind. He’d message saying ‘It was great flying with you.’ and always spent a lot of money on me.”
The month that Ms Pow left her job, she made $60,000 which was more than her yearly salary.
The Rabbi
US content creator Amelia Lynne was surprised to find out she had conservative Jewish subscribers in her midst, with many Rabbis following her and regularly engaging with her content.
“One of them did a FaceTime call, and I didn’t realise he was a Hasidic Jew. I was shocked when I answered the call and realised he was full-on Orthodox with the side curls,” Ms Lynne, who is Jewish herself, shares.
She described these kinds of traditionalist followers as “very nasty” in chats.
“They try and say the most crazy things, whatever they’ve seen in porn, they try it out with sex workers,” Ms Lynne explains.
“They’re so kinky. Most of them have been quite degrading, to be honest. It’s kind of gross to be treated like that by random people, like full-force degrading.
“Then they’ll message me on the holidays like Yom Kippur and say, ‘Have a great day!’ or on Hanukkah, they wish me happy holidays.”