The Daily - The Sunday Read: ‘The “E-Pimps” of OnlyFans’
Episode Date: June 12, 2022Ezra Marcus takes a deep dive into the world of OnlyFans and self-described e-pimps, and untangles the vast web of models, agencies and “chatters” (the people who often act as the OnlyFans models ...in private messages with the customers) that support these lucrative businesses.The article explores how e-pimps can help turn a seemingly simple exchange of “dollars for sexts” into a transaction that extends across layers of third-party intermediaries.With the help of e-pimps, even the most impersonal of transactions are fine-tuned to feel personal. As Mr. Marcus discovers: “That OnlyFans creator you’re DMing? It’s probably a marketing ghostwriter impersonating a woman.”When it comes to OnlyFans and its legions of e-pimps, deceit and desire work together closely.This story was written by Ezra Marcus and recorded by Audm. To hear more audio stories from publications like The New York Times, download Audm for iPhone or Android.
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it's never been easier to simulate intimate relationships.
OnlyFans is one of the most popular websites that does just that.
And it does so by selling access to erotic content.
But really, the whole point of paying for OnlyFans
is to be able to chat with its content creators directly.
Maybe just about how someone's day was going.
Or to ask,
Hi, can you make me a sexy video of you doing X, Y, or Z?
Something like that might cost, say, 30 bucks.
My name is Ezra Marcus. I'm a contributor to the New York Times Magazine,
and today's Sunday read is my article, The E-Pimps of OnlyFans.
OnlyFans is a way to have access to the people that you're interested in.
But it goes beyond what we typically think of in terms of fandom.
Some subscribers might believe that they have a relationship with the model and
that's what they're ultimately paying for.
In 2019, there were about 120,000 people creating content on OnlyFans.
By the end of 2020, there were well over a million.
A massive boost, driven in part by people who found themselves out of work during the pandemic.
They saw OnlyFans as a way to help make ends meet.
But the work itself can be time consuming.
If you're a creator, you're trying to build your customer base.
But you could be spending hours a day sexting or haggling about prices for photos and videos.
And for every message you don't respond to, you're possibly leaving money on the table.
You might miss a message from a fan who has $1,000 to spend on you.
And that's where people like Jason Rosero come in.
Jason isn't an OnlyFans creator, although he's made a lot of money from it.
Jason, and a growing number of young
entrepreneurs like him have basically found a way to satisfy this seemingly insatiable demand for
intimacy by industrializing the production of it. Jason agreed to talk to me for this story,
so I flew down to Miami and met him at his luxury apartment building.
Here's my article, read by Vukas Adam.
This was recorded by Autumn. To listen to more stories from The New York Times,
The New Yorker, Vanity Fair, The Atlantic, and other publications on your smartphone,
download Autumn on the App Store or the Play Store. Visit autumn, that's A-U-D-M dot com, for more details.
On a warm January afternoon in Miami,
Jason Rosero sat by the pool and stared at his phone.
He was spending his day as he often does,
trying to grow his business.
Think expansion, which is a marketing agency.
Sort of.
Rosero has called his line of work e-pimping,
and it's a pretty apt name.
Think Expansion manages OnlyFans pages
on behalf of more than 30 women,
and as a full-service agency,
Rosero and his employees handle every aspect
of running the accounts.
They market them on social media.
They write all of their daily posts.
They even handle direct messaging sales,
impersonating the women in conversations with their subscribers
in order to sell erotic videos.
That afternoon, Rosero was looking to expand his roster.
Wearing a snug, short-sleeve hoodie,
he scrolled through numerous Instagram messages he'd
sent to women that day. All of them said essentially the same thing. I know you'd
make a lot of money with me. I want to work with you. Spend enough time on social media and you'll
encounter young people engaged in all sorts of schemes. Running dropshipping companies,
young people engaged in all sorts of schemes, running dropshipping companies, minting NFTs,
pumping crypto, selling real estate in the metaverse. Many are based in Miami. It's a place where young marketing types have embraced a vision of what the internet is actually for
that is at odds with Silicon Valley's. Less a utopian escape from reality than an infinite
expansion of its strip malls. Rosero, 27, is an exemplary member of this burgeoning class.
He pre-games his daily gym session with a smoothie made from egg whites and whey protein,
then spends his day bouncing between OnlyFans and WhatsApp, where he manages his employees.
He likes working from his downtown apartment building's 27th floor pool deck,
looking out over the blue-gray expanse of Biscayne Bay.
Rosero has a long and colorful resume.
Born in Florida to parents from Colombia,
he served in the military, worked as a stripper,
and imported ponchos from South America.
He started Think Expansion in 2017,
employing a mix of friends and salespeople he found on forums.
They helped generate leads and build social media accounts for any company that came calling. Yacht merchants,
medical billers, insurance companies, lawyers, influencers, even multi-level marketing firms.
He's a born hustler whose personal hero is Jordan Belfort. His speech is peppered with a mix of
marketing jargon,
lowering the action threshold,
and impressions of film and cartoon characters,
sometimes in the same sentence.
My mission is to stop Dr. Evil at all costs,
he said in 2019 in an interview with a local news site.
Haha, something like that.
I'm a digital entrepreneur.
He started working on OnlyFans near the beginning of the pandemic,
after Think Expansion was hired by an OnlyFans creator
looking to grow her social media following.
Rosero noticed a strong correlation between her social reach
and her profits on OnlyFans.
No business really benefits from growing on Instagram
as directly as someone working in the sex industry, he told me.
It's pretty intuitive.
Instagram doesn't allow full nudity, but provocative photos posted there can drive sales on other platforms that do.
He began reaching out to models and creating pages on their behalf.
In November 2020, he posted on Instagram, recruiting people to work for him managing OnlyFans pages.
OnlyFans is a true opportunity for not just sexy girls,
but also guys as well, he wrote.
What I'm proposing here is e-pimping.
Two years later, Rosero has the OnlyFans operation more or less routinized.
When he starts managing a new client,
he asks for a bank of nude photos and videos.
Rosero's ghostwriters, known in the industry as chatters,
will act as the model in private messages
with the customers who pay to talk to her.
These chatters work in shifts,
responding to incoming messages
and reaching out to new subscribers,
trying to coax them into buying expensive pay-per-view videos. They tell particular subscribers that a video was recorded just for
them. In fact, the same clip might be sold to dozens of people. The chatters earn a small
percentage on most sales, and the rest is split between the agency and the model. The subscribers
presumably think they're talking directly to the woman in the videos,
and it is the job of the chatter
to convincingly manifest that illusion.
Their clientele,
typically horny, lonely men,
make it pretty easy.
Our best customers come to us
not so much to buy content
as they come to us to just feel a connection,
reads a post on Think Expansion's website.
This desire, the post explains,
is a pimp's bread and butter,
e or otherwise.
Hustling simps has been an art since the beginning of time.
It's both a little awkward and entirely inevitable
that businesses like Think Expansion
would emerge on OnlyFans.
Awkward because OnlyFans markets itself as providing the infrastructure
for authentic, personal connections between creators and their fans.
Inevitable because platforms like OnlyFans naturally encourage businesses to scale up,
maximizing profits through growth however they can find it.
And when the product is intimacy, or at least a persuasive facsimile,
scale can turn the seemingly simple exchange of dollars for sexts
into a Rube Goldbergian transaction
across layers of third-party intermediaries.
In these situations,
just a fraction of the sum paid to a model
will actually end up in her bank account.
A small cut goes to the chatter,
whose labor manifests her online existence. A small cut goes to the chatter,
whose labor manifests her online existence. A larger one enriches the schemers who made the connection, and the app on which it all takes place collects its own 20% fee.
Think expansion is just one example of a broader phenomenon. Over the course of two dozen interviews
spanning six countries, I've discovered a thriving warren of companies employing a similar business model,
using ghostwriters on OnlyFans to provide digital intimacy at scale.
These agencies operate, out of necessity, a little below the radar.
They collectively represent hundreds of models,
and some claim to bring in profits that can range into the seven figures annually.
As the sun set beyond the pool deck,
Rosero laid out his enterprise for me.
He logged into the OnlyFans page of a model who appeared to be in her mid-forties,
pictured reclining nude on a bed.
This girl we literally just started yesterday, he said.
She started with eight subscribers.
Okay, now she's got 108 subscribers.
You know, an older lady.
But the thing is that, look, since she's blonde and white skin, bro,
it's easier to market her because all over the world,
they like blonde girls with white skin.
Rosero tries to position OnlyFans pages in line with archetypes familiar to habitual porn
viewers. A model this age could be marketed as a MILF. Someone younger, a barely legal teenager,
or a relatable girl next door type. These categories inform how his chatters talk to
the subscribers. An 18-year-old girl, she texts different than a 25-year-old girl, you know?
Or an older lady, he explained.
An older lady won't use emojis.
She'll use, like, a semicolon and parentheses for a winky face
when a younger girl will actually use a winky emoji.
He pulled up a page with a young model wearing pink-striped thigh-high socks,
opened a chat with a subscriber, and typed out,
Hey, Daddy.
You see how there's a space before the exclamation mark?
He said.
Yeah, that's how 18-year-olds type.
When it comes to sales, Rosero said,
those details make all the difference. OnlyFans started in 2016 and has since emerged as the top platform
worldwide for creators to sell monthly subscriptions for self-produced erotic content.
The platform has become synonymous with this sort of business, though some use it for other purposes.
It served as a financial lifeline for many in the pandemic, allowing people to monetize time spent indoors.
In 2019, there were reportedly 120,000 content creators using the platform.
By December 2020, that number had risen to more than a million.
Many creators on the site aren't just posting nudes.
The real product is relationships.
Money from subscriptions can be trivial compared with the profits earned by selling custom videos,
sexting sessions, and other forms of fan interaction
that require more concerted engagement than simply posting to a feed.
This can be extremely time-consuming.
In an interview with this magazine last year,
an OnlyFans creator said she spends six hours a day just sexting with subscribers.
But these relationships are important to cultivate.
In a blog post on its website,
OnlyFans encourages creators
to cater to their superfans
who pay for custom content and
will give more if they feel
they're getting something special.
Last year, I was given a
40-page instruction manual used
to train newly hired chatters at
an agency called Echo DM.
According to someone with knowledge of its operations, Echo, which is based in Florida
and has practically no public internet presence, built a stable of lucrative pages by reaching out
to women overseas, especially in Russia and Eastern Europe, on cam sites like Chatterbait,
and offering to spin up OnlyFans accounts on their behalf.
The company takes as much as 70% of the gross.
A steep cut, but some find the offer appealing
since the company's pages can make tens of thousands of dollars each month.
The manual explained in granular detail how that money is earned.
Every page needs to have an established backstory
to make the person seem more believable, it stated.
OnlyFans works because people pay for a connection
that feels deeper than porn.
The document encouraged Echo's employees,
called page managers,
to identify big spenders
who would part ways with more than $200 in short order
and cultivate a deep rapport by asking about their life
and what they do for a living.
This would have the added benefit, the document notes,
of assessing how much more they might spend.
If someone spent over $1,000,
managers ought to text them as if they were your significant other.
It even included a list of diminutive nicknames
managers might use for their customers.
Babes.
Baby boy.
Baby.
Cutie.
Honey.
Good boy.
Bad boy.
Boo.
Sexy.
Above all, the manual emphasized efficiency.
Managers were told to answer DMs in less than five minutes
since users were coming to OnlyFans for immediate gratification
and would go elsewhere if ignored.
It encouraged the creation of keyboard shortcuts
so that managers could deploy an arsenal of rote sexual phrases with a few keystrokes,
steering conversations toward the hard sell.
It also outlined
a series of strategies to boost engagement
on the pages, including a gambit
in which models would offer to rate
a picture of a subscriber's penis for a fee.
The models, however,
would do no such thing.
Their page managers would.
And the document instructed them
to be honest in these situations,
sending the highest ratings only
to the truly well-endowed,
while reserving low ratings for those with
either a humiliation fetish or
clearly a very small
penis. Echo
DM did not respond to requests for
comment.
When I first saw the document,
I had never heard of OnlyFans agencies.
I figured Echo must be an aggressive outlier exploring the margins of possibility in an unregulated industry.
In fact, there are a variety of OnlyFans-oriented companies in the field
which employ a spectrum of techniques to maximize profits from the accounts they manage.
But all of them take advantage of the same raw materials.
The endless reproducibility of digital images,
the widespread global availability of cheap English-speaking labor,
and the world's unquenchable desire for companionship.
One of the world's most famous porn stars, who goes by Riley Reid,
started her own agency in 2021 called ASH, short for All-Star Hustle.
She told me she started the agency to spare her clients
from the more exploitative models of other agencies,
which often charge 30% or more.
ASH charges between 10 and 15%.
It doesn't use chatters or rely on aggressive sales of paid content
through girlfriend experience relationships.
Rather, Reed's agency tracks which types of content perform best for any given page
and then provides creative direction and sales strategies.
Reed's clout helps her arrange media appearances for her clients.
It's not unlike the sorts of services provided by a traditional modeling agency or porn studio.
Other agencies take a far more active hand in managing accounts and a much bigger slice
of the profits.
Mark Schultheis, 19, and Oliva Dreyer, 20, were working boring desk jobs until two years
ago when they started a company called The Bunny Agency.
called the Bunny Agency.
Today, Schultheis claims the agency grosses between $150,000 and $200,000 every month
from 12 OnlyFans pages.
The agency takes as much as half.
A small percentage goes to the chatters
and the rest goes to the models.
The models are asked to promote the pages
on their social channels.
Otherwise, everything is handled in-house,
with hired chatters in the Philippines and the United States
impersonating the models in conversations with subscribers.
The chatters are sometimes told to make their clients
feel as if they have an online girlfriend,
so that they'll tip more.
Sure, this business model is a bit tricky
as far as the subscribers are concerned, Schulteis acknowledged.
But when it comes to OnlyFans strategies, he said, using chatters makes the most money.
The key to this business model is the ready availability of cheap English-speaking labor around the globe.
Job postings for OnlyFans chatters are widespread on freelance sites like Upwork,
many offering as little as $3 an hour.
Agency heads told me they've hired workers from Eastern Europe, Africa, and all across Southeast Asia.
At the end of the day, it is a geo-arbitrage business, wrote Justin Dallas,
the founder and chief executive of Cam Model Agency, in an email.
This phenomenon is part of a broader boom in homespun online businesses that connect cheap developing world labor with American consumers, allowing the proprietor to step back and reap the profits.
the profits. A well-known example is dropshipping, in which retailers advertise consumer goods shipped from suppliers, often in Shenzhen, directly to buyers. This can be more or less
automated so that the nominal sellers don't need to do much other than post digital ads for watches
or vibrators and let their business run itself. OnlyFans marketing, though perhaps more time
consuming, brings together an even more geographically dispersed labor pool.
Some of the models come from poorer countries in Europe and South America
and may not have the English skills to reach American customers.
A chatter in, say, the Philippines, completes the circle.
Chatters aren't necessarily better at extracting money from subscribers
than a creator who handles her own inbox.
In fact, they can be worse.
You should do your homework very well about who you hire, a 29-year-old OnlyFans creator who goes by Sonia LeBeau told me.
She has worked with agencies in the past and had negative experiences with them.
and had negative experiences with them.
At one point,
chatters hired to impersonate her did such a poor job
that her most loyal subscribers
realized they were being fooled.
She apologized to all her subscribers
and resumed answering their messages herself.
Still, she said,
agencies can provide significant benefits,
especially for large accounts.
Multiple chatters can work simultaneously,
and they can clock in for consecutive shifts, making sure no message goes unanswered.
Popular accounts often receive so many messages that answering them all would be nearly impossible
for one person. Unanswered messages mean money left on the table. Then there's all the other
tasks required of an OnlyFans creator,
like actually creating content and external marketing on social media,
all of which take away time from answering DMs. Chatters relieve the burden. Chatters also offer
creators a buffer from their subscribers, who can be rude, stingy, or worse. Are you constantly
glued to your phone negotiating pricing for custom videos
with hundreds of broke, lonely creeps?
Sounds fun, reads a post on Think Expansion's website,
touting its services to models.
Dallas believes that most OnlyFans models
with large followings have some kind of team in their corner.
It becomes overwhelming consistently creating content,
promoting and maintaining 20, 30, 50-plus conversations daily, he wrote.
Around the world, though, there is a vast pool of workers
willing to have those conversations,
often for wages lower than what Americans make flipping burgers.
In February, I spoke on Zoom with Andre,
a chatter in Manila who works for a Barcelona-based OnlyFans agency called Casey Incorporation.
He declined to provide his last name.
Although he finds the job fulfilling, he doesn't think his family would approve.
Many Western companies rely on outsourced labor in the Philippines for customer service and data entry.
Before his current role, Andre worked in a T-Mobile call center.
Now he works a daily four-hour shift messaging a model's subscribers.
When his shift is over, he signs out of the account and another chatter logs on, picking up conversations where he left off.
on, picking up conversations where he left off. During his stint as a chatter, Andre has become intimately familiar with the quirks and desires of the subscribers. Over time, he's learned something
of a sex work cliche. More than sexual gratification, he said, many of the guys just want someone to
talk to. Facilitating those familiar conversations is good for business.
Seeing that,
oh, this person's been messaging me for a couple of weeks
straight, he said,
we take note of those people.
Andre said that most of the big spenders
he talks to seem pretty normal,
if a little depressed and isolated.
A small minority,
he said, clearly suffer
from mental health issues.
He's sympathetic.
The world's a lonely place, and I guess these people are the loneliest ones.
In fact, Andre sees a connection between his predicament and the customers.
Many people doing jobs like his, he said, are poor.
They have nowhere else to go and nothing left to do.
They're desperate.
At the end of the day, if you got to eat, you got to do what you got to do.
The people he chats with, he said, display a similar desperation, if for different reasons.
If you're lonely, you don't want to be stuck being lonely.
Then you got to do what what you gotta do as well.
Several chatters in Asia who I talked to said they made pretty good money relative to other outsourced jobs.
But their income is minuscule compared with the profits their work generates for the agencies,
which have discovered a gold mine at the intersection of globalization and Western alienation. Whether it's legal or not is a separate question. In November of last year,
two ex-employees of a company called Unruly Agency sued, claiming wage theft and wrongful
termination. The agency manages OnlyFans accounts for a number of Gen Z stars, including the rapper Lil Pump and social media creators like Tana Mongeau.
In the lawsuit, first reported by Insider,
the complainants said that managers were instructed to lie to, dupe, and mislead fans
by ghostwriting messages on behalf of popular models
with the goal of getting them to pay for locked content or leaf tips.
Their bosses, they claim, came up with a system
in which account managers would keep track of which questions fans asked models most often.
The managers would then ask the models to record a video answering each question,
encouraging them to change outfits between videos
to make the clips seem as if they were recorded on different days.
The managers would send the videos to thousands of fans, each of whom would think they were receiving a personalized response
to a question they had specifically asked. Unruly has denied these claims.
In the United States, fraud is typically defined as an instance in which an entity or individual
knowingly deceives another in order to gain something of value.
In other words,
lies on their own are not actionable.
You could certainly argue
that a subscriber talking to a chatter
is being induced to spend money
he would not otherwise
based on false information.
But you could just as easily argue the opposite.
The photos and videos the subscribers receive
are genuine depictions of nude women,
even if the perceived intimacy around the sale is false.
This is online sex chatting, after all.
In a post, Catfish World,
should anyone really expect that internet accounts
truthfully represent who is running them?
In response to an email that described these business practices,
a spokeswoman for OnlyFans directed me to a section of the platform's
terms of service that covers the legal responsibility of creators on the site.
Only individuals can be creators, it reads,
but it also acknowledges that a creator might employ an agent,
agency, management company, or other third party
to help run her account. Nothing in the rules explicitly requires that a creator disclose
such an arrangement.
As we snacked on empanadas poolside, Rosero logged into the OnlyFans account of a young blonde woman
and scrolled through her inbox.
He and his chatters typically respond as quickly as possible
and try to get eager guys warmed up, he said,
then hit him with the left and the right.
The hard sell.
Ideally, he'd let go of a video for $50 if the guy asked for it,
or as little as $20 if Rosero was pushing it on him.
A subscriber had sent her a message just minutes before.
Rosero eyed it, trying to determine his strategy.
I'm in New York, it said.
French descent.
I speak French, English, and Spanish.
He started typing out a reply.
Voulez-vous coucher avec...
He trailed off with an ellipsis,
inviting the man on the other end to finish the sentence.
Then Rosero pulled up an account where one of his chatters was on duty,
talking to subscribers.
Looking through the inbox, you could see that just a few minutes earlier, the chatter had logged on and sent a mass message to subscribers. Looking through the inbox, you could see that just a few minutes earlier,
the chatter had logged on
and sent a mass message to subscribers
that just read,
Sup, babe?
Eating some lunch,
Juan replied.
Enjoy your lunch,
the chatter wrote back.
I'm just chilling naked.
The chatter then sent a nude video,
several minutes long,
which the subscriber would need to pay $30 to unlock.
He didn't bite.
Rosero scrolled back
in the conversation
to the day before
to discover that
a previous exchange
had ended similarly.
So, he said,
this guy is kind of hard.
The model had almost
6,000 subscribers
paying a monthly fee
for access to her pictures
and for the opportunity to chat with her.
Rosero estimated that 80 or 90 of them might speak with his chatters over the course of a day.
He opened another conversation in which a subscriber had just tipped $12
and asked the model for nudes.
Let me go ahead and send him some stuff, Rosero said, and uploaded
a video of the model masturbating.
It was cheaper than what a subscriber
might typically have to pay for such a clip.
Being a new subscriber,
if they tip instantly,
bro, then yeah, we'll reward
them with something like that, he said.
That's a one-time offer type thing.
Rosero said
subscribers sometimes become suspicious
that they're not really chatting with the model.
But resolving these situations is easy.
His team will just ask the model to record a video
in which she says the subscribers handle.
The most lucrative model Rosero works with
earns around $40,000 per month, he estimated,
across multiple subscription platforms.
He built her
account from the ground up and he's not sure why it grew so fast the model was young and blonde
with a cheerful face that wouldn't look out of place on a college campus brochure
rosero's theory is that the more relatable a model looks the better her account tends to do
a model looks, the better her account tends to do.
Unusually attractive models don't always sell well.
When people are watching porn, they want something that's like attainable or that they can see themselves with, he said.
He pulled up her OnlyFans inbox and opened a random conversation.
Hi there, the subscriber had written.
Any update on my burp custom?
Oh yeah, Rosero said. He wanted her to burp. On my last night in Miami, I rode with Rosero in his
new model Alfa Romeo to a club in Fort Lauderdale. On the way, we picked up Brandon and Danny,
26 and 24, an engaged couple who are his friends and clients. They
withheld their last names because they did not want their families to read about their line of work.
Danny is the face of an OnlyFans page managed by Think Expansion. Brandon sometimes helps
photograph her content and they shoot adult videos together. Rosero drove us all to the Angelus,
a former church in the middle of a suburban block that had recently been converted into an upscale club.
Lasers flashed through the stained glass windows.
Men in tight button-ups and women in skirts and heels tumbled out of Corvettes and Teslas in the parking lot and lined up in front of earpiece-wearing security guards.
They turned La Iglesia into a place of sin,
said Rosero,
beaming ear to ear when we stepped inside.
The music is bussin'.
The club was almost
comically torqued up.
A DJ spun EDM remixes
of Top 40 hits
as sheets of fog
blasted down
from cannons on the ceiling,
momentarily reducing visibility
to a matter of inches.
Waitresses in short skirts cut through the mist,
ferrying champagne and liquor bottles adorned with LED sparklers from the bar to the VIP section.
Young people ground their bodies together.
You could practically feel the mercenary energy coursing through the city,
a bonfire of unalloyed market optimism in an otherwise bearish nation.
Brandon and Danny moved to Miami from Los Angeles
in early 2020
so that Danny could try out as a dancer
for the Miami Heat.
But their plans were soon upended by the pandemic,
and Brandon then discovered he had a serious back injury,
a result of years spent practicing parkour.
With bills to pay,
they thought they'd give OnlyFans a try.
The couple eventually connected with Rosero on Instagram
and handed over the keys to their account.
When they started working together,
they sent him a Google Drive filled with a year's worth of content.
Rosero runs their page,
and Danny periodically adds new material to the drive.
The only time he ever has to ask the couple for anything is when a subscriber refuses to pay for content
without receiving video confirmation
that he's really talking to Danny.
Rosero's agency runs all the funnels
from the base-level content promotion side
all the way through writing the messages on the account, Brandon explained. The couple loves the arrangement.
They've manifested the elusive dream of passive online income,
enough of it to live alone in a spacious high-rise apartment
with a commanding view of the Miami skyline.
Over the past two years, they've experienced firsthand
the great destigmatization of
online sex work to the extent
that friends now understand
and applaud their success.
This is like
respected, Brandon said.
This is a career path.
We can pursue it
and it's fine.
At one point, Rosero looked over at Brandon and Danny,
lost in each other's eyes on the dance floor.
Danny was doing well, he explained,
but he had yet to figure out exactly how to position her on OnlyFans.
She's too beautiful, he said.
Not common enough.
Impossible looks are for magazines and runways.
What people really want, in the end,
is someone they can imagine talking to in real life.