British canoeist says he's being forced to choose between Olympic dreams and OnlyFans
Kurts Adams Rozentals claimed he has been stopped from pursuing his ambition to become an Olympic canoeist because of his "edgy" social media content. (via CNN Newsource)
A top British canoeist claims he has been banned from competing in the sport because of content he posted on the OnlyFans social media site.
Kurts Adams Rozentals is described as 'an elite performer' on the website of Paddle UK, the umbrella body governing the sport in Britain. According to the site, Rozentals won a silver medal in the canoe slalom at the World Under-23 Championships in 2023, while also picking up a silver as part of a three-man team at the same event.
A separate page on the site shows that the 22-year-old was in contention to represent Great Britain at the 2028 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles.
But all this came to a halt, Rozentals said, at the beginning of April, when he was contacted by the governing body.
In a lengthy Instagram post dated April 12, he told his 73,900 followers that 'i got a call from a PaddleUK representative, where i was told that i'm banned from competing at the 2nd and final part of GB team selections as well as banned from speaking to my coach, staff and teammates.
'PaddleUK's reasoning? my social media posts.'
OnlyFans is a popular subscription-based website known for its sexually explicit content, although some content creators also post music and fitness videos.
Paddle UK confirmed to CNN in an email that it is carrying out an investigation but declined to go into the details.
'Paddle UK can confirm that in line with our Athlete Disciplinary Policy, an athlete on the canoe slalom programme is under interim action, pending the outcome of an investigation,' the governing body said.
'The investigation has been referred to independent investigation service Sport Integrity,' it added.
According to Paddle UK, the investigation 'places a restriction on the athlete being able to engage with the World Class Programme (which includes communicating with athletes, coaches and staff who are part of the programme).'
It also means the athlete cannot attend sites or facilities associated with the governing bodies.
The body added: 'Paddle UK is committed to ensuring a safe and open environment for all, and interim action under the Athlete Disciplinary Policy is only taken where necessary and proportionate.'
Struggling to pay the bills
Rozentals said on Instagram that his family had 'sacrificed everything so i could keep chasing the ultimate dream of racing at the Olympics.'
The athlete, who moved to the United Kingdom from Latvia as a child, told followers that 'money has always been a massive struggle' for him and his family so he decided to do 'whatever it takes' to succeed.
He wrote: 'i started making what they now describe 'edgy videos', with the focus to grow a following, because trying to live on the salary PaddleUK pays their athletes is near impossible.'
He continued: 'i was sick of worrying how to pay rent, i was sick of being on the verge of homelessness.
'i did whatever it took to never be in that position. was it unconventional? sure. i'm not perfect.
'but to ban me from racing? to ban me from speaking to my teammates like i'm some criminal? that's fu**ing insane.'
OnlyFans wasn't first choice
The 22-year-old told CNN that the ban came in between the two selection rounds for the British team, adding: 'The goal of that post was for it to go viral and get the message across about athletes' funding.'
The decision 'came out of the blue,' he said, and left him feeling he was being 'treated like a criminal.' There has been no further communication from Paddle UK, he added.
Rozentals' Instagram account links to a website bearing his name. The landing page features the OnlyFans logo with a clickable link, and the message: 'Dear mum and dad, please don't click on this link.
'And to everyone else, hope you enjoy ;)'
Rozentals told CNN that he earns £16,000 (US$21,500) a year from canoeing and that he had tried multiple other revenue sources before turning to OnlyFans.
'If it's not illegal, I've done it,' he said. 'From working late nights freelance video editing to working at the Amazon factory, I've done it all. But it's completely unsustainable. It impacts training too much. Doing OF was not my dream, it was a way to support the ultimate goal of going to the Olympics.'
He told CNN he has earned more than £100,000 ($135,000) from OnlyFans since joining the site in January. He acknowledged that some of the 'edgy' content that is sent directly to subscribers is of himself in the nude.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CTV News
25 minutes ago
- CTV News
The number of migrants reaching the U.K. in small boats in a single day hits a 2025 high
A group of people believed to be migrants are led through the Border Force compound in Dover, England, Sunday June 1, 2025, following a number of small boat crossings in the Channel yesterday. (Gareth Fuller/PA via AP) LONDON — U.K. government figures Sunday showed that more than 1,100 migrants arrived in the country on Saturday in small boats from France across the English Channel, the highest number recorded on a single day so far this year. The latest Home Office figures show that 1,194 migrants arrived in 18 boats on Saturday in what were settled weather conditions, bringing the provisional annual total so far to 14,811. That's 42 per cent higher than the same point last year, an increase that has piled pressure on the Labour government, which returned to power nearly a year ago partly on disillusionment with the previous Conservative administration 's efforts to get a grip on the the numbers making the crossing. Having ditched the Conservative government's plan to send migrants who arrived in the U.K. by unauthorized means to Rwanda, Prime Minister Keir Starmer said his government would get control by smashing the gangs and the business models that sustain their smuggling operations. Since gaining power, Starmer's government has sought better intelligence-sharing internationally, enhanced enforcement operations in northern France and has adopted tougher rules in its immigration legislation. French police officers were seen watching Saturday as migrants boarded at a beach in Gravelines, between Calais and Dunkirk, and authorities were then pictured escorting the boats. French authorities said they rescued 184 people. 'Pretty shocking, those scenes yesterday,' Defense Secretary John Healey told Sky News. He added that it is a 'really big problem' that French police are unable to intervene to intercept boats in shallow waters, adding that the U.K. is pressing for the French to put new rules into operation so they can intervene. 'They're not doing it, but, but for the first time for years … we've got the level of cooperation needed," he told Sky News. 'We've got the agreement that they will change the way they work, and our concentration now is to push them to get that into operation so they can intercept these smugglers and stop these people in the boats, not just on the shore.' Despite French and U.K. efforts, the cross-Channel route, one of the world's busiest shipping lanes, remains a major smuggling corridor for people fleeing conflict or poverty. Many migrants favor the U.K. for reasons of language, family ties or perceived easier access to asylum and work. The Home Office says 36,816 people arrived in the UK on small boats in 2024, 25 per cent more than in 2023 (29,437). The highest number of arrivals was in 2022, with 45,774. Pan Pylas, The Associated Press


CTV News
an hour ago
- CTV News
The U.K. seeks to send a message to Moscow as it outlines higher defense spending
Director of Mechanical Engineering Matt Beamont shows Britain's Defence Secretary John Healey, left, a storm shadow missile on an assembly line at the MBDA Storm Shadow factory in Stevenage, England, Saturday May 31, 2025. (Dan Kitwood/Pool via AP) LONDON — The U.K. is about to see the biggest increase in defence spending since the end of the Cold War as it seeks to send 'a message to Moscow,' the British defence secretary said Sunday. John Healey said the Labour government's current plans for defence spending will be enough to transform the country's military following decades of retrenchment, though he does not expect the number of soldiers — currently at a historic low — to rise until the early 2030s. He said plans for defence spending to hit 2.5 per cent of national income by 2027, which amounts to an extra 13 billion pounds (US$17 billion) or so a year, were 'on track' and that there was 'no doubt' it would hit three per cent in the next parliament in the early 2030s. The government will on Monday respond to a strategic defence review, overseen by Healey and led by Lord George Robertson, a former NATO secretary general and defence secretary in a previous Labour government. It is expected to be the most consequential review since the fall of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s, and make a series of recommendations for the U.K. to deal with the new threat environment, both on the military front and in cyberspace. Like other NATO members, the U.K. has been compelled to take a closer look at its defence spending since Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. 'This is a message to Moscow,' Healey told the BBC. 'This is Britain standing behind, making our armed forces stronger but making our industrial base stronger, and this is part of our readiness to fight, if required.' U.S. President Donald Trump has also piled pressure on NATO members to bolster their defence spending. And in recent months, European countries, led by the U.K. and France, have scrambled to coordinate their defence posture as Trump transforms American foreign policy, seemingly sidelining Europe as he looks to end the war in Ukraine. Trump has long questioned the value of NATO and complained that the U.S. provides security to European countries that don't pull their weight. Healey also said Russia is 'attacking the U.K. daily' as part of some 90,000 cyber attacks from state-linked sources that were directed at the U.K,'s defence over the last two years. A cyber command to counter such threats is expected to be set up as part of the review. 'The tensions are greater but we prepare for war in order to secure the peace,' he said. 'If you're strong enough to defeat an enemy, you deter them from attacking in the first place.' While on a visit to a factory on Saturday where Storm Shadow missiles are assembled, Healey said the government would support the procurement of up to 7,000 U.K.-built long-range weapons and that new funding will see U.K. munitions spending hitting 6 billion pounds in the coming years. 'Six billion over the next five years in factories like this which allow us not just to produce the munitions that equip our forces for the future but to create the jobs in every part of the U.K.,' he said. Robert Jenrick, the shadow justice secretary for the main opposition Conservative Party, welcomed the government's pledge to increase defence spending but said he was 'skeptical' as to whether the Treasury would deliver. He called on the government to be more ambitious and raise spending to three per cent of national income within this parliament, which can run until 2029. 'We think that 2034 is a long time to wait, given the gravity of the situation,' he told Sky News. Pan Pylas, The Associated Press

Globe and Mail
4 hours ago
- Globe and Mail
Cattle have roamed Cambridge's city centre for hundreds of years. GPS is keeping the tradition going
The sight of cattle grazing in the parks and open spaces around Cambridge is as much a part of the scenery as the ancient colleges that make up the city's famous university. But the tradition that dates to medieval times nearly fell victim to budget cuts this year until officials found a 21st century solution – GPS-guided collars. Farmers have had the right to herd their livestock onto public land in Cambridge for centuries, and each spring and summer around 100 cattle roam around the city's medieval commons, fens and greens – including Sheep's Green, where Charles Darwin collected insects. They go about their grazing alongside merchants, tourists and scholars strolling through the University of Cambridge, and they've become a city attraction. But cattle also have a tendency to wander, and the Cambridge cows have been known to fall into the River Cam, which winds through city. Every year around four of the animals end up in the water, either from slipping, running into each other or being spooked. There's little risk of them drowning since the Cam is shallow and cattle are surprisingly good swimmers. But once they tumble in they can't climb back up the muddy riverbank, so they stand and wait to be rescued. That can take hours and requires a specialized farmhand called a pinder, plus usually the fire department as well. The city council spends £10,000 ($18,600) annually on a 24-hour pinder service to fish cattle out of the river. That's in addition to the £28,000 the council pays every year to maintain gates, grids and fences for grazing. The total outlay is far more than the £4,000 the city collects in annual grazing fees from farmers. Last November, city council faced a financial crunch and needed to find £6-million in savings from its £71-million budget. As part of the cuts, councillors proposed dropping the 24-hour pinder service and leaving it to farmers to pick up the tab. Meet SwagBot, the AI-powered robot cattle herder preventing soil degradation The proposal caused an outcry from residents and farmers, and put the future of the grazing into doubt. Farmers argued that forcing them to pay for the service would make using the commons uneconomical and they'd have to pull their cattle. The backlash led councillors to consider an alternative. They decided to fit the cattle with solar-powered GPS collars that emit high-pitch sounds as the animals approach a virtual fence. If they persist, the collar sends a mild electric pulse to train them to turnaround. The virtual boundary can be adjusted with an app, which farmers can also use to track the whereabouts of their cattle. The GPS system, developed by a Norwegian company called Nofence, has been rolled out on a trial basis. It costs a fraction of the on-call pinder. 'It works really well for what it's got to do,' said Mark Drew, who keeps 30 Hereford cattle on the commons and another 40 outside of town. 'We're tenant farmers. We don't own a lot of land ourselves, so we have to get grass wherever we can. It's nice to have a presence in Cambridge and it's not too expensive,' he said, adding that he pays the city around £50 a year per head. 'Our cattle tend to work quite well with the public as well because they are quite quiet.' Mr. Drew said a major benefit of the GPS system is that city officials can easily adjust the virtual fence when needed. For example, they can change the enclosure to protect newly planted flowers and gardens. 'Once they've flowered then they turn the fence off and the cattle can then go over those areas.' He's had far too many late-night experiences rescuing cattle from the water. One from his herd got stuck in the river near Darwin College a couple of years ago and managed to climbed onto a small island. 'It couldn't get back to the common because there was a vertical bank. So we had to, with the help of the fire service, lift it back across the the water channel.' It took most of the day to get the animal back on dry land, Mr. Drew said. 'If by using the collars we can avoid the cattle going near those watercourses in the first place, we can save all the hassle and aggravation of that.' Opinion: If supply management has to be killed, Canada's dairy industry will have to follow New Zealand's lead Angelika von Heimendahl, a local veterinarian who keeps 10 of her 50 cattle on the commons, said it's not clear how many cattle the collars have saved from the river. 'We're not 100 per cent sure whether it's dogs chasing them, or whether it just happens. If it's dogs, then the collars are not going to help.' But for now, she said, the collars have worked well and Cantabrigians and cattle continue to live side by side. Although it's people, she added, who give her greater concern. 'Cattle are still animals that need to chew their cuds and lie down and be able to relax. And I think people sometimes really push their luck how close they go, or try and touch them.'