Why creators use OnlyFans is simple: money. But why users do, when the internet is overflowing with free porn, is a harder question to answer.
DMARGE spoke to Samantha X, a high class escort who has two OnlyFans accounts (a coaching one and a "raunchy" one), to get the inside word.
"It isn’t hard to find sex these days, but I feel men are looking for something deeper," Samantha told DMARGE exclusively. "They aren’t paying thousands of dollars for just sex. With OnlyFans, I think it is a way of men feeling connected to someone without meeting them, the safe connection from home."
"OnlyFans isn’t just about perving on someone’s naked body. My coaching Samantha X Only Fans has more members than my raunchy one. This tells me people want something deeper."
According to Samantha, who is in her 40s, to some degree, OnlyFans is similar to her escorting where "there is the physical side" but "it’s always quick, and my bookings last for hours."
"The hours aren’t spent being intimate, it is spent talking."
"I charge $1200 an hour and $3300 for a dinner date – and men pay that to talk!"
"Some men open up so much it’s like they haven’t spoken to anyone in years about anything remotely personal. I’ve lost count the number of men I have seen cry. This is why I love men, I love my job and why I call myself an overpaid psychologist."
"The number one reason men see escorts is because they are starved of emotional connection."
Samantha also told us that it's not just the clients feeling the love – many escorts and OnlyFans creators gain a sense of emotional fulfillment too.
"Let’s not forget, escorts get their needs met too with clients. I am single and the companionship, intimacy, connection and cuddles fulfill my needs too. While escorting gives you freedom and flexilbility, it can also be very lonely and isolating. No one quite understands the job apart from other escorts. My time with my clients is special and I find they support me just as much as I support them."
A recent profile by The New York Times also suggests people use OnlyFans for the connection, not just the content.
“You can get porn for free,” Dannii Harwood, one of OnlyFans' top earners, told the New York Times. “Guys don’t want to pay for that. They want the opportunity to get to know somebody they’ve seen in a magazine or on social media. I’m like their online girlfriend.”
Think: the illicit thrill of exchanging raunchy DMs with a friend of a friend, but with the support of a committed partner.
"If a guy is a regular customer, she likely knows his birthday, the names of his children and his pets — even when to call after a surgical procedure."
"He may pay her to help him achieve an orgasm, though she is not a prostitute. He may purchase erotic videos from her, though she is not a porn star."
"On OnlyFans... subscribers — mostly male; straight, gay and beyond — pay models and social media influencers a fee, generally $5 to $20 a month, to view a feed of imagery too racy for Instagram. With that access, subscribers can also direct message and 'tip' to get pictures or videos created on demand, according to their sexual tastes."
The site also has features enabling models to create creative, custom content.
"She introduced themed days like Mistress Mondays and Dare Dannii Tuesdays, when men bid to watch her drive around town in her underwear and order a pizza to her home, whereupon she would answer the door naked. She also chatted with fans daily, learning their habits, their sexual predilections and their insecurities."
"Ms. Harwood took out her phone and showed evidence of her theory. She brought home $29,420.47 in August, $34,303.24 in September, $52,693.29 in October and $52,760.49 in November."
The Economist's sister magazine 1843 has also covered this trend, with Porchia Watson, a 32-year-old creator telling 1843 in January she would make, on average, about £10,000 a month on it (a number which, if lockdown statistics are anything to go by, could well have gone up since then).
"As is the case with most forms of sex work, the dynamic between fans and creators is more than just a sultry exchange."
"People think that everyone who follows a girl on OnlyFans is being filthy, when in actual fact it’s just a lot of people who are lonely or unhappy in their marriages or who haven’t got a lot of friends," she tells 1843. “I have quite a few guys who have social anxiety and would love a girlfriend but can’t speak to girls.”
The mirage of proximity is crucial to OnlyFans’ appeal, 1843 reports, interviewing a a 42-year-old user – an engineer from Sheffield – who said, “Hardcore porn is easy to come by, but a relationship with a girl is hard to get.”
"He’s been following Brooks since September 2018 and estimates he spends around £300 a month on her page," 1843 reports, and "believes that Brooks does care for him."
“If I go quiet and don’t take part in things for a few days, she notices and will start messaging me and asking me how I am.”
As for their "relationship? “It's difficult to define,” he tells 1843. “There are times when it feels like we almost are a couple.”
The trouble is, however, "there is no quick-fix for emotional connection," Samantha X told DMARGE. "I would say talk to your friends which is what women do, but I know from listening to men, they find that hard."
RELATED: Australia Facing 'Emotional Horniness' Crisis, Relationship Experts Confirm
This comes in the context of a crisis of "emotional horniness," which Relationship Expert and Advisor to Channel 10's The Bachelor Samantha Jayne recently told DMARGE has hit unprecedented levels this year.
"Especially with the mix of social media, coronavirus and more and more people connecting virtually. Not to mention the boost in narcissists out there and people are afraid of getting hurt emotionally."
"More and more people I speak to struggle to live with the fear of getting hurt so they live in their heads, they worry about what a person will do and their stops an emotional connection which leads to no relationship which then leads to more emotional horniness."
So: is OnlyFans a useful tool, or an expensive bandaid solution?
Jayne told DMARGE: "Whilst technology has its benefits it has got more people in their heads and people need to be touched. We need physical contact to release the love cuddle hormone 'Oxytocin', to release cortisol from our bodies. This improves mental and physical wellbeing."
"It's a total band-aid solution. The reality is you to pay to get a connection...think about that... how does that feel? Would that person reach out to you and be there when you really needed something.. and paying for connection...Aren't the best things in life for free?"
For her part, Samantha X told DMARGE, "Men are more starved emotionally than ever. While we live in an era of technological connection, we are more disconnected than ever. Men are either in unhappy marriages, divorced or looking for love – and all of which can be incredibly lonely. It’s not easy to start again, it’s not easy to find someone that ticks all the boxes either, and while there are endless dating apps, a lot of men are looking for something deeper."
Jayne gave DMARGE some advice to anyone out there feeling lonely.
"If you're feeling emotionally horny then you can change that, get in touch with feeling good within yourself, meet your needs personally. I don't mean masturbate like crazy because that's never going to work and will probably just lead to blisters and emptiness."
"What I mean is fill your own emotional void, figure out what is going on. Why are you feeling empty, lonely is there pain that needs to be healed. Stop destructive behaviour such as alcohol, drugs, overeating or excessive porn. Instead get emotionally connected with friends, family and people that make you feel good, learn to trust people and yourself."
"Become the best version of you, exercise, get outdoors, start reading inspirational books, look for role models that inspire you, people in your life or celebrities, or if you can't think of anyone write down what you would like your ideal life to be. When you're feeling better get out and online start meeting new people."
"If you're in a relationship and you're feeling the void then look at when this first happened and rewind to a time when you were happy in the relationship. What did you do differently?"
This advice would appear to serve many couples well; just this week on Oops the Podcast, a listener wrote in with a plea for help which shows the weird space between porn and real-life cheating applications like OnlyFans now sit in.
"We've been together for three years now and we have a healthy relationship," the listener writes.
"From the beginning, I have made it clear I do not care if he watches porn, but paying for it crosses a line for me."
"I have noticed recently he... is."
"I had a gut feeling he was paying for... something. I'm not proud of this but I did look through his bank statement. I found a $9.99 charge and a $7.99 charge. I know it's from Pornhub Premium and Modelhub. I also know his favorite pornstar is on Modelhub and sells videos for those same prices.
"He can spend money on [this] but when we go do something we always pay separately because he talks about how he is tight with money."
As the hosts concluded: this is not cool.
For anyone seeking to get over this "hard addiction" for themselves, this guide is a good place to start.
Read Next
- Addiction, Lies & Shame: How Porn Is F*cking With Australian Men
- A High End Escort Explains Why She Would Never Pay For Sex
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