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New York Post
7 days ago
- Entertainment
- New York Post
Virgin porn star Sophie Rain quits OnlyFans ‘Playboy Mansion' Bop House — now they need a sexy new influencer to roommate her
Someone needs to take the 'Rains.' The Bop House is taking applications for a new housemate to join the fold — less than a week after top earner and co-founder Sophie Rain's exit amid rising tensions. Three of the members Camilla Araujo, Aishah Sofey and Julia Filippo, all 22, posted the recruitment ad to the compound's official TikTok account, where it's amassed 5.9 million views. 4 From L to R: Bop House members Alina Rose, Summer Iris, Sophie Rain and Aishah Sofey. Jam Press/@sophieraiin The audition video prompted oodles of applications to the Miami, Florida mansion, also known as the 'OnlyFans House,' which reportedly costs a cool $60,000 per month to live in. 'We are doing Bop House auditions,' the trio declared in the clip. Meanwhile, Filippo announced that the trifecta would be in LA next month for tryouts, evoking the premise of a 'Bad Girls Club'-style reality TV show. Sofey noted that they were trying to replace Sophie Rain, 20, who decided to vacate the mansion last week to reportedly spend more time with her animals on her farm in Tampa. The content creator, who reportedly made a cool $80 million since 2023, cited 'drama with the girls in the house' as one of the reasons for her departure. 'I make the most money, so I don't need to be in an environment where we aren't all getting along,' the devout Christian creator had huffed. 4 'We are doing Bop House auditions,' Camilla Araujo, Aishah Sofey and Julia Filippo declared in the recruitment clip. Jam Press/@bophouse 4 The Bop House in Miami, Florida. Jam Press/@sophieraiin How do aspiring content creators apply for a spot in this salacious sorority? Sofey explained that applicants fill out the application linked in their bio, adding that influencers need to be 18 to apply. In fact, the application reportedly requires a copy of the Bop House hopefuls' IDs. 4 'I make the most money, so I don't need to be in an environment where we aren't all getting along,' Sophie Rain (pictured) had declared while explaining her decision to leave the Bop House. Jam Press/@sophieraiin The form also asks applicants to write a short essay about why they'd be a good candidate to replace Rain in the house, whose other original members include Alina Rose, 24, Summer Iris, 19, Ava Reyes,19, and Joy Mei, 19. If chosen, applicants will be invited to in-person auditions in LA on August 9. 'Y'all always say that y'all going to be part of the Bop House and you can be a Bop and you DM us all the time so show up, show out and fill out the link in our bio,' Araujo declared. The trio claim they've been inundated with applications with creators begging to become made members of this porn star pantheon. 'I applied, can't wait to hear back,' said one applicant, while another pleaded, 'Can I just live there for free? I'll cook and clean.' 'I want to be a part of the Bop House,' said a third. However, others weren't so thrilled with the idea. 'Bop House auditions, this generation is cooked,' scoffed one while another claimed that, 'It isn't the same without Sophie.'


New York Times
16-07-2025
- New York Times
Everyone's Obsessed With True Crime. Even Prisoners Like Me.
In the early aughts, when I was waiting on Rikers Island to be tried for murder, I had to watch what everyone else in the communal day room was watching on TV: shouts of 'Jer-ry! Jer-ry!' and announcements that 'You are not the father.' After I was convicted, in 2004, and sentenced to 28 years to life in prison, TV would occupy even more of my time. Prisons do get cable: Normally, the population pays via things like fund-raisers and the profits from visiting-room vending machines. At Clinton Dannemora, a maximum-security prison near the Canadian border, I bought a 13-inch television from the commissary, and it felt like a privilege to watch what I wanted, alone in my cell. In Attica, where I transferred in 2007, we had the Oxygen channel, on which everyone would watch reality shows like 'Bad Girls Club.' I enjoyed all the gossiping and scheming on 'Big Brother' and 'Survivor,' and when I put an ad on a dating website for prisoners I listed 'The Bachelor' as my favorite show. The women who wrote to me related. I eventually married one. Her name was Danielly, and she watched a lot of true crime. It made her so paranoid that she hung a bell inside her front door to alert her to intruders. Once, while she was visiting me, I noticed her peering behind us — she had recognized another prisoner from an episode of '20/20.' This happens to me now too: I'll be in the mess hall or the yard and recognize someone from a true-crime show. He'll be scooping oatmeal or exercising, and I'll remember the re-enactment of his crime, the bludgeoning or the burying. In 2016, I transferred to Sing Sing. By then, Oxygen had shifted from reality shows to true crime; the channel's logo was even redesigned to resemble police tape. It would soon be airing a seemingly nonstop run of shows like 'Buried in the Backyard.' For a few years I was transferred to a smaller prison in the Catskills, where we didn't have in-cell TVs — but when it closed and I landed back in Sing Sing, I found that true crime had come to dominate what felt like every station. NBC American Crimes ran reruns of 'Dateline,' 'American Greed' and 'Lockup,' which I once heard described as 'prison porn.' (It's strange to walk down the tier, look through the bars of someone's cell and see a TV turned to 'Lockup' — an inside look at prison for someone who is already inside a prison.) Merit TV had 'Crime Stories With Nancy Grace.' As I write this, Court TV is running a marathon of 'Interview With a Killer.' More than half of Americans now watch true crime, according to one YouGov poll. (The F.B.I. reports that between 1993 and 2022, meanwhile, the rate of violent crime in the United States fell 49 percent.) We watch those shows in here, too. As true crime exploded in popularity, the demand for fresh content had producers searching for stories to tell, exhuming murder cases from years and even decades ago. This is how Danielly eventually found herself watching a true-crime show about me, a drug dealer in prison for killing a rival. Some watch with the prison hierarchy in mind. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.
Yahoo
11-03-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Popular Black Influencer's Family is Clapping Back at Rumors Following Her Death in Mexico
Fans are mourning the loss of a popular social media content creator who passed away in Mexico just one day before her 25th birthday. Alysha Burney died in her sleep on March 2 while on vacation in Cabo San Lucas, according to Fox4KC. But while her followers mourn Burney's untimely passing, her family claims that not all of the details circulating about her death are true. The Kansas City native, known for her hilarious 'Bad Girls Club' parody skits, was a popular social media content creator, with over 580,000 followers on Instagram and over 2 million on TikTok alone. Alysha's brother, Charles Burney, who was with her at the time of her death, said she died in her sleep after having an asthma attack. He addressed some of the online speculation that the promising young star died as a result of drug use and warned those spreading disinformation that they would be dealt with in court. 'It is extremely difficult seeing all of the false narratives trying to defame her legacy and we are ready to take legal action for those continuing to spread false information regarding her passing,' he wrote in a March 10 Instagram post. Burney told Fox4KC that his sister did not use drugs and was laser focused on going after her goals. 'She was not selfish with her knowledge and was a very open book about her journey. She will always be dearly loved, and her legacy will live on forever,' he said. 'She does not do drugs. She was a self-loving and happy individual who cherished her life and was looking forward to the upcoming year's plans. She was in Mexico to celebrate her birthday. She was a very classy young woman.' Charles Burney said his sister, who graduated from the University of Central Missouri with a degree in Digital Media Production, had been living in Los Angeles trying to establish herself as a writer and director. He added that she wanted to use her knowledge and experience to help other aspiring creatives from her hometown. 'Her lifelong goal was to be a writer and a director. Another goal she had was to return to Kansas City, open a production studio, and help other young creatives from Kansas City get to where she was,' he told Fox4KC. For the latest news, Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.