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OnlyFans stars Bonnie Blue Annie Knight Lily Phillips are X-rated labubus

OnlyFans stars Bonnie Blue Annie Knight Lily Phillips are X-rated labubus

The Australian13 hours ago
'You might not know me, but your husband will,' is how Bonnie Blue introduces herself online to her 800,000 X followers.
So too will your teenage sons, daughters and grandchildren.
Blue by name, and nature.
'Bonnie Blue' is the nom de guerre of 26-year-old Tia Billinger, a young English woman from a 'good home' who gave up a successful career working in finance recruitment to become a garish sex worker.
The difference in her trajectory is that she isn't just a 'worker', she is a woman using her naked body to build an X-rated media empire earning her – allegedly – $3m a month via OnlyFans.
She started out filming her liaisons with groups of men, young men and many masked men by posting the finished pornographic products online for paid subscribers.
Racy previews and her casting calls are available free of charge to everyone who scrolls the internet. It's there she posts her address and we learn that participants who attend must bring along photo ID, evidence of ejaculate and men aged 18 and older are required to make 'donations'.
That was all before she was kicked off the video subscription platform for extreme activities like reportedly sleeping with more than 1000 men in one day and then attempting to place herself, bound and blindfolded, in a glass box 'petting zoo', and encouraging people to do what they liked to her.
The idea for a sexualised stunt was reminiscent of Marina Abramovic's performance in the 1970s where the artist sat in front of objects ranging from honey to scalpels and encouraged her audience to use them on her.
Blue hasn't heard of this seminal, boundary-pushing work. 'She gave them all these horrible sharp things – I was just going to have dildos and lube,' she told The Times.
These two events she claims to have participated in have never been seen.
OnlyFans refused to allow her to upload her 'world record' with 1000 men due to consent issues; she has since moved to another platform, which she is busy growing. Elon Musk's X is the only social media site that allows her to publish unencumbered. She may cop criticism for 'preying' on young, 'barely legal' men to film their escapades which she then monetises, but the artist known as Bonnie Blue has snookered broader society.
She's now mainstream. Since being legitimately cancelled online, she's had to pivot. Blue is desperate for publicity. She must be thrilled to be the subject of a new documentary which has just aired in the UK on Channel 4 (a publicly established network that raises its own revenue).
Her father, who worked as a railway technician, watched it without flinching and her mother is proud of her endeavours.
'If you could earn £1m a month, you'd change your morals and get your bits out,' Mrs Billinger said.
The documentary came about when the filmmaker became aware of the existence of Bonnie Blue as her content was being served up to her 15-year-old daughter via her social media algorithm. A fact that Australians processing this week's expansion of the government's world-first social media ban for those under-16 should take on board.
'There is a place for social media. There is no place for predatory algorithms,' Communications Minister Anika Wells said.
Gawking online – either in disbelief, disapproval or delight – at Bonnie Blue boosted her notoriety, fame and infamy. All of this she has parlayed into numerous legitimate media appearances, including a coveted cover story in the esteemed The Times Magazine.
She is not your average porn star or sex worker. She's the Wall Street banker of the pleasure industry.
She's Gordon Gekko in lingerie.
She's a ruthless morality raider.
'I'm just a clever slut,' is how she described herself in a recent conversation with the equally controversial Andrew Tate, with empty eyes and a straight face.
Tate is the loquacious lad who rose to fame on Big Brother who now wears sunglasses indoors and espouses misogyny online. He is also facing numerous rape, human trafficking, organised crime, and tax evasion charges.
Like Tate, Blue also thinks women who are infrequently intimate with their partners or husbands are 'lazy and uneducated'.
She said she is the product of 'what women have been fighting for the past 100 years'.
She also got her start in Australia.
Blue and her now ex-husband moved to the Gold Coast after Covid in 2022 after failed attempts to conceive. It was here in the shadows of the Glitter Strip where her self-esteem crashed.
'I became really insecure. I'd cover up my body, cancel trips,' she told The Times. She claimed living among the gaggle of 'glamorous influencers' who call the Gold Coast home caused her to put on weight and lose her self-confidence.
It was here she started experimenting with 'camming' – where women talk and perform lewd acts online for money.
After her marriage broke down, due to the pair 'growing apart', she became an escort.
She also joined OnlyFans and set about climbing its ranks as a high-earner. One stunt included her attending Schoolies, distributing business cards with a QR code to her page, offering herself 'for free' to consenting 18-year-old men. She published their encounters amid a flurry of publicity, where she was labelled a 'sexual predator'.
The only label she cares about is the one her mother made her. She carried the homemade sign for her next feat that read: 'Bonk me and let me film it.' She then went on to sleep with hundreds of university students in the UK and Mexico.
Before being de-platformed by OnlyFans, she was blacklisted by Airbnb, dating apps Tinder and Hinge and Australia for breaching a tourist visa for publicising a return to Schoolies for a sequel.
More than 20,000 people signed a petition to have her banned.
'Now my nephew is crying and saying he can't get his booking deposit back,' one Reddit thread said of the news.
'There's no doubt if this was a male he would be labelled a predator,' another said.
There's the rub. She embraces the outrage and courts the controversy. She doesn't appear to care for anything other than her bikini line, and bottom line.
She recruits other young women – of which there are now many 'copy cat' versions embarking on similar 'careers', including Australian Annie Knight – to participate in obscene stunts with young men to produce warped 'sex education' videos.
She does not pay any participant and shuns any responsibility.
'I'm not their mum. I'm not there to guide them. I'm here to say 'Hey, this is a business opportunity',' she said.
Her next professional accomplishment appears to be tier-marketing these 'business opportunities' for those barely out of high school. She may not blink about exploiting virgins, but she should blanch at taking advantage of people whose only corporate experience at that age is a part-time gig at McDonald's.
She's the personification, not of porn culture, but of the influencer economy.
She's a sociopath in the sense that statistics show a high proportion of the most successful chief executives are.
Bonnie Blue Inc may be a success story but the inception of Bonnie Blue highlights the importance of legitimate sex education and counselling services in schools and beyond to counteract how social media is frying the fragile synapses of young people.
She's terminally bored – as the documentary, and corresponding media, shows.
She was bored working a 9 to 5 job; bored driving a Mercedes by the time she was 19; and she's bored (and worried about being broke) now she's being repeatedly blocked online.
She's boring, too.
You just have to take a look at her provocative Instagram captions to realise that for someone who markets herself as a provocateur and has a perverted preoccupation with fluids, Bonnie Blue is about as deep as a puddle. Read related topics: HealthSex Jenna Clarke Associate Editor
Jenna Clarke is a journalist and commentator who has been covering politics and pop culture for more than 20 years in The Australian, Vogue, online, radio and television. Follow @jennamclarke on Instagram for more current affairs, cultural trends and chatter.
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Bombshell book claims Jeffrey Epstein called Prince Andrew a ‘serial sex addict'
Bombshell book claims Jeffrey Epstein called Prince Andrew a ‘serial sex addict'

News.com.au

time2 hours ago

  • News.com.au

Bombshell book claims Jeffrey Epstein called Prince Andrew a ‘serial sex addict'

Prince Andrew has been branded a 'serial sex addict' in a bombshell new book — with Jeffrey Epstein reportedly claiming the Duke of York was even kinkier than him. The shocking allegations appear in ' Entitled: The Rise and Fall of the House of York ', which the British royal reportedly tried to block, The Sun reports. According to the Daily Mail, late pedophile financier Epstein is quoted in the book as saying: 'We are both serial sex addicts. 'From the reports I've got back from the women we've shared, he's the most perverted animal in the bedroom. 'He likes to engage in stuff that's even kinky to me – and I'm the king of kink!' The explosive revelations come alongside fresh allegations about Andrew's conduct on royal tours. A Reuters correspondent reported that, during the King of Thailand's diamond jubilee celebrations in 2006, more than 40 women were taken to Andrew's Bangkok hotel room. 'Often, as soon as one left, another would arrive,' the reporter said. Hotel staff were reportedly stunned that 'more than 10 a day' were going to the Duke's suite. The exposé portrays the 64-year-old royal as a man consumed by sex, with claims from an investigative journalist that he has bedded over a thousand women, ranging from porn stars and actresses to palace staff and bartenders. One 20-year-old model, who says she twice slept with Andrew before being whisked to Mustique, recalled: 'He wanted me to engage in kinky sexual activity. 'He had no boundaries. He told me he had an open marriage arrangement with his wife. 'After returning to London, I never heard from him again. I felt like he used me for a few days, so he could live his wildest fantasies.' Masseuse Emma Gruenbaum, who worked on him at Royal Lodge, alleged Andrew was a 'constant sex pest,' insisting on being naked for massages and making crude remarks. 'That's just not normal behaviour for a professional sports therapy session,' she said. The book also recounts disturbing tales from palace insiders. One former staff member claimed: 'When I started, I was warned to stay away from him. 'He would sometimes enter the staff quarters. 'It seemed everyone was aware of his behaviour, but little was done about it.' From his 'Randy Andy' schoolboy reputation to being accused of bullying aides and humiliating women at society events, Andrew is painted as both sex-obsessed and arrogant. Aides alleged he once had an employee moved because of a mole on his face, while another was sidelined for wearing a nylon tie. The York family reportedly tried to block the book, warning contacts not to co-operate and enlisting the Foreign Office to discourage diplomats from speaking. Despite legal threats, the exposé has gone to print — leaving Andrew once again at the centre of a scandal. It comes as a top lawyer warned that Andrew may not be in the clear despite the FBI dropping its probe into his ties with Jeffrey Epstein. Spencer Kuvin, who has represented five of Epstein's alleged victims, said the Duke of York, 65, still has reason to worry after six years of avoiding travel abroad for fear of arrest. 'I still don't think Andrew can sleep soundly,' Mr Kuvin said. 'With the quick change of administration or new leadership at the Department of Justice, the investigation could be reopened or continued. 'Andrew needs to visit the US to answer questions from the FBI. Avoiding this merely makes people think he's guilty.' Andrew has always denied claims by Virginia Giuffre that he abused her when she was 17, insisting he never saw or suspected Epstein's crimes. Giuffre died in Australia in April at the age of 41. There is no statute of limitations for federal sex crimes in the US, meaning allegations could be revived at any time. Andrew has not set foot in America since meeting Epstein in New York in 2010.

OnlyFans stars Bonnie Blue Annie Knight Lily Phillips are X-rated labubus
OnlyFans stars Bonnie Blue Annie Knight Lily Phillips are X-rated labubus

The Australian

time13 hours ago

  • The Australian

OnlyFans stars Bonnie Blue Annie Knight Lily Phillips are X-rated labubus

'You might not know me, but your husband will,' is how Bonnie Blue introduces herself online to her 800,000 X followers. So too will your teenage sons, daughters and grandchildren. Blue by name, and nature. 'Bonnie Blue' is the nom de guerre of 26-year-old Tia Billinger, a young English woman from a 'good home' who gave up a successful career working in finance recruitment to become a garish sex worker. The difference in her trajectory is that she isn't just a 'worker', she is a woman using her naked body to build an X-rated media empire earning her – allegedly – $3m a month via OnlyFans. She started out filming her liaisons with groups of men, young men and many masked men by posting the finished pornographic products online for paid subscribers. Racy previews and her casting calls are available free of charge to everyone who scrolls the internet. It's there she posts her address and we learn that participants who attend must bring along photo ID, evidence of ejaculate and men aged 18 and older are required to make 'donations'. That was all before she was kicked off the video subscription platform for extreme activities like reportedly sleeping with more than 1000 men in one day and then attempting to place herself, bound and blindfolded, in a glass box 'petting zoo', and encouraging people to do what they liked to her. The idea for a sexualised stunt was reminiscent of Marina Abramovic's performance in the 1970s where the artist sat in front of objects ranging from honey to scalpels and encouraged her audience to use them on her. Blue hasn't heard of this seminal, boundary-pushing work. 'She gave them all these horrible sharp things – I was just going to have dildos and lube,' she told The Times. These two events she claims to have participated in have never been seen. OnlyFans refused to allow her to upload her 'world record' with 1000 men due to consent issues; she has since moved to another platform, which she is busy growing. Elon Musk's X is the only social media site that allows her to publish unencumbered. She may cop criticism for 'preying' on young, 'barely legal' men to film their escapades which she then monetises, but the artist known as Bonnie Blue has snookered broader society. She's now mainstream. Since being legitimately cancelled online, she's had to pivot. Blue is desperate for publicity. She must be thrilled to be the subject of a new documentary which has just aired in the UK on Channel 4 (a publicly established network that raises its own revenue). Her father, who worked as a railway technician, watched it without flinching and her mother is proud of her endeavours. 'If you could earn £1m a month, you'd change your morals and get your bits out,' Mrs Billinger said. The documentary came about when the filmmaker became aware of the existence of Bonnie Blue as her content was being served up to her 15-year-old daughter via her social media algorithm. A fact that Australians processing this week's expansion of the government's world-first social media ban for those under-16 should take on board. 'There is a place for social media. There is no place for predatory algorithms,' Communications Minister Anika Wells said. Gawking online – either in disbelief, disapproval or delight – at Bonnie Blue boosted her notoriety, fame and infamy. All of this she has parlayed into numerous legitimate media appearances, including a coveted cover story in the esteemed The Times Magazine. She is not your average porn star or sex worker. She's the Wall Street banker of the pleasure industry. She's Gordon Gekko in lingerie. She's a ruthless morality raider. 'I'm just a clever slut,' is how she described herself in a recent conversation with the equally controversial Andrew Tate, with empty eyes and a straight face. Tate is the loquacious lad who rose to fame on Big Brother who now wears sunglasses indoors and espouses misogyny online. He is also facing numerous rape, human trafficking, organised crime, and tax evasion charges. Like Tate, Blue also thinks women who are infrequently intimate with their partners or husbands are 'lazy and uneducated'. She said she is the product of 'what women have been fighting for the past 100 years'. She also got her start in Australia. Blue and her now ex-husband moved to the Gold Coast after Covid in 2022 after failed attempts to conceive. It was here in the shadows of the Glitter Strip where her self-esteem crashed. 'I became really insecure. I'd cover up my body, cancel trips,' she told The Times. She claimed living among the gaggle of 'glamorous influencers' who call the Gold Coast home caused her to put on weight and lose her self-confidence. It was here she started experimenting with 'camming' – where women talk and perform lewd acts online for money. After her marriage broke down, due to the pair 'growing apart', she became an escort. She also joined OnlyFans and set about climbing its ranks as a high-earner. One stunt included her attending Schoolies, distributing business cards with a QR code to her page, offering herself 'for free' to consenting 18-year-old men. She published their encounters amid a flurry of publicity, where she was labelled a 'sexual predator'. The only label she cares about is the one her mother made her. She carried the homemade sign for her next feat that read: 'Bonk me and let me film it.' She then went on to sleep with hundreds of university students in the UK and Mexico. Before being de-platformed by OnlyFans, she was blacklisted by Airbnb, dating apps Tinder and Hinge and Australia for breaching a tourist visa for publicising a return to Schoolies for a sequel. More than 20,000 people signed a petition to have her banned. 'Now my nephew is crying and saying he can't get his booking deposit back,' one Reddit thread said of the news. 'There's no doubt if this was a male he would be labelled a predator,' another said. There's the rub. She embraces the outrage and courts the controversy. She doesn't appear to care for anything other than her bikini line, and bottom line. She recruits other young women – of which there are now many 'copy cat' versions embarking on similar 'careers', including Australian Annie Knight – to participate in obscene stunts with young men to produce warped 'sex education' videos. She does not pay any participant and shuns any responsibility. 'I'm not their mum. I'm not there to guide them. I'm here to say 'Hey, this is a business opportunity',' she said. Her next professional accomplishment appears to be tier-marketing these 'business opportunities' for those barely out of high school. She may not blink about exploiting virgins, but she should blanch at taking advantage of people whose only corporate experience at that age is a part-time gig at McDonald's. She's the personification, not of porn culture, but of the influencer economy. She's a sociopath in the sense that statistics show a high proportion of the most successful chief executives are. Bonnie Blue Inc may be a success story but the inception of Bonnie Blue highlights the importance of legitimate sex education and counselling services in schools and beyond to counteract how social media is frying the fragile synapses of young people. She's terminally bored – as the documentary, and corresponding media, shows. She was bored working a 9 to 5 job; bored driving a Mercedes by the time she was 19; and she's bored (and worried about being broke) now she's being repeatedly blocked online. She's boring, too. You just have to take a look at her provocative Instagram captions to realise that for someone who markets herself as a provocateur and has a perverted preoccupation with fluids, Bonnie Blue is about as deep as a puddle. Read related topics: HealthSex Jenna Clarke Associate Editor Jenna Clarke is a journalist and commentator who has been covering politics and pop culture for more than 20 years in The Australian, Vogue, online, radio and television. Follow @jennamclarke on Instagram for more current affairs, cultural trends and chatter.

Meghan's ex-BFF Jessica Mulroney ‘regrets' friendship amid marriage split: report
Meghan's ex-BFF Jessica Mulroney ‘regrets' friendship amid marriage split: report

News.com.au

time19 hours ago

  • News.com.au

Meghan's ex-BFF Jessica Mulroney ‘regrets' friendship amid marriage split: report

IN LONDON The Duchess of Sussex's former BFF Jessica Mulroney 'somewhat regrets' their friendship, according to a new report. It emerged this week that the Canadian stylist, 45, is divorcing her husband, Ben, after 16 years of marriage – and according to the Daily Mail, the scrutiny that came with her association to the Duchess of Sussex had 'later caused tensions … in her marriage'. The two women had been best friends for years after meeting in Canada, where Jessica had introduced Meghan – who was then based in Toronto while filming Suits – to the city's glittering social scene. They remained close during the early stages of her relationship with her future husband, and Jessica and Ben's children – twins Brian and John and daughter Ivy – even served as page boys and bridesmaid at their royal wedding in 2018. However, the friendship appeared to sour following Jessica's 'white-privilege' scandal in 2020, where the stylist was axed from both her TV gigs following her racially charged spat with black lifestyle blogger Sasha Exeter. Amid the rampant online — and professional — backlash, Jessica issued an apology and Ben quit his job as a television presenter to help her. 'If [Jessica] could go back, a part of her wishes she was never part of [Markle and Prince Harry's 2018] wedding,' an insider alleged to the Mail on Friday. 'While she enjoyed all the exposure it brought her at the time, that same exposure is what caused her social media rift to blow up in the way it did and led to the end of her friendship with Meghan and her marriage.' Sources further alleged that while Jessica 'did consider Meghan family' at one point, she now reportedly 'sees that whole time as a 'dark cloud.' Back when the scandal broke, it was reported that Meghan reacted with shock after hearing of Jessica's 'tone deaf' threats to sue Exeter, and swiftly decided she can 'no longer be associated with her'. 'Meghan is absolutely mortified that she's been dragged into this complete mess. She said Jessica is in no way a racist, but the way she handled the situation was tone deaf and heartbreaking,' a friend of Meghan's told the Daily Mail at the time. In 2020, Exeter publicly blasted Jessica in an emotional 12-minute Instagram video, describing how she had threatened her during an argument about 'speaking up' against racism and had left her feeling 'paralysed in fear'. Exeter claimed that Jessica had 'taken offence to a very generic call to action' posted online, causing the women to engage in an argument about racism and white privilege. Exeter then claimed that Jessica had sent her a series of offensive messages, which ended with a threat to her livelihood. Jessica herself commented on the video to apologise, and alluded to her friendship with Meghan, who has been at the centre of racist attacks since she began dating Prince Harry in 2016. 'I am unequivocally sorry for not doing that with you and for any hurt I've caused. As I told you privately, I have lived a very public and personal experience with my closest friend where race was front and centre,' she wrote. 'It was deeply educational. I learned a lot from that. I promise to continue to learn and listen on how I can use my privilege to elevate and support black voices.' However, Exeter then shared a screenshot on her Instagram story of a private message sent by Jessica shortly after her public apology, which appeared to confirm her intent to sue for 'liable' (sic). Jessica was subsequently dropped from featuring as an expert on a daytime lifestyle show and Meanwhile, Page Six reported on Tuesday about Jessica and Ben's split, alleging they'd broken up 'some time ago'. The publication added that Jessica shared the news with fellow guests at a recent Toronto wedding, with a source claiming she 'seemed sad, but also relieved to have some clarity'.

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