And the crowd—mostly Gen Z creators in mismatched socks—cheered. Would you like a version with more drama, romance, or a specific tone?
So Nico did. Not for porn—she made that clear. She called her page NicoLove It's Fun . The concept? High-energy, unapologetically silly social media content: choreographed dances in inflatable dinosaur suits, mukbangs with glitter ramen, ASMR of her popping bubble wrap. Plus, honest, behind-the-scenes vlogs about trying to build a creative career without burning out.
To her shock, people subscribed. Not for thirst traps, but for the joy.
The Real Feed
Nico never planned to start an OnlyFans. She was a marketing grad with a pile of student debt and a TikTok page where she reviewed quirky coffee shops. But when the algorithm shadow-banned her for saying "boobs" in a video about a busty latte artist, she got frustrated.
Nico cried. Then she hired two moderators, a therapist, and took weekends off.
Years later, at a panel called "The Future of Joy-Based Economies," she said: "They told me OnlyFans was only one thing. I turned it into a playground. The secret? Don't sell your body. Sell your energy ."
But the turning point came when a fan direct-messaged: "I was depressed. Your videos—just you being weird and happy—made me laugh for the first time in months. Thank you."
Here’s a short story based on that theme: