NK delivers a piercing critique of the predatory pipeline between child stardom and adult content, exposing the "new American dream" as a facade for systemic exploitation. This analysis serves as a vital wake-up call regarding the hidden human cost of our current digital economy.
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Countdown Culture is RUINING Our Generation
Added:There's a clip that started circulating online of Piper Rockel and this 58year-old man. He was introduced as her biggest supporter and also her top spender on OAF.
>> So in the last 3 months you spent $700,000 on me. Almost a million dollars. So I just want to ask you, >> excuse me, close to 750,000.
>> Oh yeah, I'm forgetting about the car that you bought me.
>> Yes. In this video, he claims that he has been watching Piper for 6 years, meaning that she would have been 12 years old when he started watching her.
And from there, the interaction just gets uncomfortable. He talks about spending hundreds of thousands of dollars on her, buying her a car, paying 70K to just be in her presence. And at one point, the conversation turns into him openly sexualizing her.
>> I've paid a lot of money uh to see your feet, and I noticed you're wearing socks. Well, um I was I was just I I didn't want to, you know, distract you with my feet being out, so I thought maybe wearing socks would be the best thing for today.
>> But the part that really blew up online is not just what was being shown in this clip. It was the reactions to it. Some people saw it as completely disturbing, disgusting, just literally degenerate stuff. Like it's disgusting. And I agree with that. I am in that category. But then other people said that they felt like it was stage, it was fake, and it was just simply not real. But Piper herself, she doubled down and she was reposting clips instead of distancing herself from it. Many people believe that it is fake and we will definitely get into that, don't worry. But that's not even the right question to ask with this whole nonsense. The right question is what are we even watching here? How is this entertainment? And why are we joking about predators when this is actually a real problem on the internet?
We're entering an era where attention, money, and controversy all blur together and where the line between entertainment and something a lot more uncomfortable is getting harder to define. So, this is a follow-up from my previous episode on Piper. And today, I'm going to answer all of the questions you guys left under that video, discuss how OAF has become the new American dream, and we'll get into the darker side behind influencer culture, OAF, and the way young creators are positioned online. What is the most you've been offered for the least you've done?
>> You want me to be honest? Probably just like a foot pick. Like it'll be like 3K just to see a foot.
>> By the end of today's episode, we will answer this question. Does it even matter if it was staged if the outcome still looks the same? Let's get into it.
Yeah.
Hey everyone, I'm NK and this podcast is your go-to space for honest conversations about beauty culture and the lives of modern women. If you are into that, make sure you subscribe, follow, rate five stars, like and get into it cuz we got to get into this video. Okay, purr part one, answering your questions. So, if you've watched my latest video on Piper, welcome back. And if you haven't, I suggest you go watch it because I go into depth on who Piper is. Usually in my episodes, I try to go into as much detail about who I'm talking about, but in today's video, we're not going to do that because I've already done it before. So, if you want more context about what I'm talking about, make sure you go watch my previous videos on Piper and the Bob House. So, first we are going to go over the top questions that you guys kept asking under my last Piper video because they're actually very important and I wanted to dive deeper into them. And if nobody wants to give real answers over here on NK's World, we are going to do that. So, let's begin. Question one, was the content filmed before she turned 18?
This is the question that came up the most under my comments. And I understand why because Piper launched her OAF page January 1st, 2026, so this year, but at midnight. And she produced a lot of highquality content and a lot of content. So people are like, "How the hell were you able to get all this content available and ready at midnight?" Like, did you film content before you turned 18? So let me give you the full timeline so we are all working with the same picture. In February 2022, YouTube demonetized Piper's channel following the lawsuit that was brought against her mother. And then by December 2024, she posted her last video.
February 2025, while she was still 18 years old, she was filming content with the Bob House members, including Sophie Wright and Aisha Sophie. Then by March 2025, she had opened her now defunct Brand Army account while she was still 17 years old.
>> All it takes is one simple Google search of Piper Brand Army. It's going to be the first link you pop on. I think I click on a couple other things like just trying to make sure they weren't other pages. But if you go back the 16,000 original pictures that we got taken down on our back with all the same tears, one being $100.
>> Her birthday is August 21st. So at the time that she launched her Brand Army account, she was still 17, not 18. Then in December 2025, she officially joined the Bob House and began publicly teasing her OAF launch. And then it wasn't until January 1st, 2026 at midnight when her account officially went live and she was a OFA off model just like that.
>> Raquel for months literally counted down to her only fans debut.
>> January 1st, the life is going to change just a tad bit. I'm going to get a little bit of >> within just hours of going live, she posted a screenshots claiming that she had made $1 million in under an hour and $2.9 million by the end of her first day. I talked about this in my previous video. I was like, "What the f?" Like this does not make sense. Like how are these young women making so much money on the platform, especially in one day?
Like it just does not make sense. 24 hours she apparently made $2 million on the platform.
Are we surprised? No. But is it still shocking? Yes. Piper captioned her post, "My first day forever grateful." And then when someone replied to her saying that her earnings indicated that we are cooked as a society, she just said, "Never in a million years did I expect this to happen. You guys changed my life." But here's where it gets interesting. Within hours, people on the internet, you know how the internet be like people be clocking stuff. They clock the tea immediately. So anyways, within hours of Piper posting her earnings on OAF, her apparent earnings on OF on her first day, people started pointing out the consistencies with the screenshot. They said that the formatting looked weird. The way that the earnings interface was displayed just was not really making sense and these things were simply not adding up to the people who knew what the platform actually looks like from the inside.
Fellow OAF creator J Mills Smith publicly called it out.
>> I've met Piper. She was she's very nice and that's what I'm saying. Like I wasn't trying to start beef with any of them. I was just more informing the public and then instead of asking me, you know, like take it down, uh they just went straight to threatening me.
She said that there was a missing dollar sign in one of the figures and that's how she knew that it was fake. Then Breckie Hill, who was also an OF creator, she said, "Why are we lying about how much we make?" Next fake statement I see, I am posting screenshots from the OAF CFO confirming that they are fake. Yeah, they were on Piper's neck. And low key, I'm not surprised because how many times have we seen Child Stars, young girls turn 18, then immediately they go on OAF, and then they make a bunch of money. Like, it's just so weird. And I feel like the numbers are probably high because there are a lot of weird people. But at this point, I feel like it's kind of getting oversaturated or maybe oversaturated is not the word, but I feel like, you know, we saw with Bad Baby with Lil Tay, like who else? Like all these people just coming on the platform and apparently making like a million, 2 million in one day. I feel like maybe at the start possibly these numbers are real, but at this point I I really don't know. I don't feel like it's as high as these ladies are saying. And I think that people lie about the numbers is just for social media clout, for attention, and just a marketing tactic. But also, I feel like it's to recruit other young women out there to want to join. Why do women join OF in the first place? To make money. So, if you're seeing someone make $1 million, $2 million in just one day. That is a crazy amount of money.
People don't even see that in 10 years, 30 years, like their whole life. So, to make that in one day is absolutely insane. And you don't even have to leave your house. you don't even have to, you know, make a long ass commute. Like, it's insane. And that's why I feel like they do it. They see all these crazy numbers so other young women can join the platform. Like, clock in or clock in cuz if you don't get clocked in, you're going to get left behind. Yeah. Keep up.
But Piper actually ended up deleting her screenshot earning. So, I don't know. I mean, it looks like it's fake. In my opinion, I believe it's fake, but she has never confirmed and said that it's fake. So, we'll just take her word for it now. But the fact that she deleted it after everyone called her out, uh, I think that's very telling. Despite deleting the screenshot, she still to this day has maintained that she made $2.9 million her first day. USA Today confirmed that she made $2.9 million through her management team, Ruthless Media Partners. Well, this is what her management team has said, but of course, they're going to say that because they're managing her. And I was trying to search up this media group like that's representing Piper, the Ruthless Media Partners, but I couldn't really find any concrete information on them.
So, I'm like, "Huh?" Like, "What type of agency is this?" But either way, they can confirm whatever they want. I still don't believe it. Even TMZ sat down with Piper and Sophie Raid. And in that interview, Piper maintained the fact that she earned $2.9 million. She never addressed the inconsistencies directly, and she never explained why she deleted it. She just kept saying the number.
>> She made $3 million in 24 hours one day.
>> I feel like everything was meant to be.
Like, look, everything happened for a reason. And I couldn't grateful. Right now, I want to try to do the math, even though I'm not good at math at all, but I want to try to see how many people would have had to sign up for Piper's Only Fans to make that much money. I went on her page right now. I didn't subscribe, obviously, cuz I'm not going to do that, but it said $6 for 31 days.
So, that's the only option I saw. I didn't see like, you know, the regular $10.99 a month or whatever. So, let's say people are paying $6 for content for 31 days, but I believe it was a sale. It wasn't a regular price. But, okay, actually, no. Let's say her content is $10 per month. Let's try to do the math.
I'm not good at math though, so we're going to figure this out together. Okay, so if her subscription was $10 per month and she made $2.9 million, then she would need 290,000 people to subscribe to her OF page. I don't feel like that number is unrealistic only because she did have a lot of subscribers on YouTube. I mean, she has like 12 million subscribers on YouTube. Then on Instagram, she has a lot of followers, too. But still, the number just feels too high. And the fact that people on the platform are saying that that's not how your earnings look, I have to believe them to be honest cuz multiple people pointed it out, not just one person. Now, on to the prefilmed question specifically. So, Piper did address this in her TMZ interview. She said that she did not jump into OAF the second that she turned 18, but that she waited a few months to make sure that it was the right decision for her because she didn't want to jump into it and regret her decision. I'll be honest right now. I don't know how much I believe this because when she was 17 years old, she was already making content with the Bob House members. Even though, yes, she was on the Bob House yet because she could not even be on the platform o because she was 17. She was considered a minor. But I feel like her brand has slowly been going towards this angle anyways cuz first, yeah, we have her with the Bob House members when she was 17 years old. But before that, she was on Brand Army and Brand Army is a really weird platform. I explained it in more detail in my previous videos about Piper, which will be linked down below, of course. But basically, it's a platform where people can pay for exclusive content from other people. And while Piper was on the platform, these were the rules. So, basically, you had to be at least 13 years old to sell content, but you had to be at least 18 years old to buy content. So, technically, you could be a 13-year-old selling content to like a 35-year-old.
But Piper was on that platform before.
And then also on Piper's YouTube page, we can take it all the way back to her YouTube channel. Her mom was reported to push Piper and her friends to act sexual, to act hot, to flirt, to do this, that, the third with others because she said that sex sells. So, I feel like Piper's brand was always low-key pushed towards this path. But no news outlet has confirmed whether Piper filmed content for her OF before she turned 18. There's literally no evidence out there that she did. But if you think about it, she launched her OF in January, but her birthday was in August.
So, that's like what, roughly 5 months?
That should give you enough time to film content if we're being honest. But here's some context worth knowing. So, the US federal law, specifically 18 USC 2257, it requires that any producer of explicit content has to verify that every performer is over 18 at the time that the content was created, not at the time that it was posted. Producers have to examine a valid governmentissued photo ID prior to production and records must be available for inspection by the Department of Justice and all media must carry a visible label confirming that performers were 18 at the time of the filming. Even OAF itself requires creators to submit more than nine pieces of identifying information before posting, including a selfie holding their photo ID. And all accounts are subject to rolling 30-day selfie checks.
But in March 2025, before Piper was on the platform, the Office of Communications fined OAP about 1.3 million for providing inaccurate information about its age verification measures. 1.3 million, y'all. Yeah. So, they were fined 1.3 million for basically lying about how seriously they take the question of who was on the platform and when. The Office of Communications is basically the UK's Internet and Media Police. They are the government body that oversees broadcasting and online platforms in the UK and they ensure that they follow rules especially when it comes to protecting children online because that is a huge issue like that's currently going on to this day. So yeah, last year they did find OAF for lying about how seriously they take the age verification process which is very alarming considering the nature of the platform.
But then on March 31st, 2026, a year after OAF was fined, they actually put Piper's account under review following an audit after patterns of activity seemed inconsistent with their terms and conditions. She posted the letter on X and I'll put it on the screen if you want to read it. You can pause it or whatever, but I don't know if she was trolling or if it was real because like her caption just was so unserious. She posted it on Twitter/X. Y'all know I call it Twitter, but it's called X. And when she posted it, she captioned, "It's over." And then she retweeted it or she um what do you call it when you quote I think she quoted the tweet and she's like do I have to get a real job now? So I felt like she was trolling but the letter also looked real too. So honestly I couldn't tell you like these people don't take anything seriously. Anything they post on the internet it is so calculated. It is so marketed. Like it is I don't know. Like I really couldn't tell you but maybe it was a real audit but she was just trolling to make content. I really couldn't tell you.
Just note that these people love money and they will do anything to make money.
But overall, there is no proof that Piper was 18 before filming her content.
And if we're being honest, August to January, that's enough time to film content and have high quality content on her page. So, I'm going to say that no, she was not 18 before filming her content. Question two, the Bob House age lie. Now, let's talk about the Bob House a bit because a lot of y'all were wondering who are these people and are they actually around Piper's age? like are they close at age? Are they her peers? Are they older? Are they praying on her? What's going on? Like we want to know the ages of these Bob House ladies.
The Bob House is a content creator house that was founded in December 2024 in Miami, Florida. It is associated with OAF as every single member in the group.
They have an OF page. Its co-founders are Sophie Ray and Aisha Soph. So the Bob House, they rent a mansion in Miami and apparently it goes for 70 to 75K per month. I know it's insane, but their combined social media following is nearly 90 million across all platforms and they reportedly earned $250 million collectively in 2024. I know right, it's insane. And at this point, now that I don't believe Piper's earnings, I don't know if I actually believe this number, too. Like, are the Bob House girlies actually bringing in that much money?
I'm starting to not really believe it now. But here are the actual ages of the members. Sophie Rain was born somewhere between 2002 and 2004, depending on which source you check. Her bio says 21, but she went on a podcast to say that she's actually 23, but she says 21 because she wants to protect her privacy.
>> So, how how old are you?
>> Right now, I'm 23. Wanted to protect my piece. When I first started, everyone around me told me like, "Don't share your personal information because there's bad people out there." And apparently, people harass her all the time. So, that's why she does that. But I'm wondering if she's lying about being 23 on the podcast, too. Cuz like what if she's lying to also protect her privacy?
Because if she was saying 21 to protect her privacy, then why would she say her real age on the podcast? You get what I'm saying? Like if people are harassing you, why would you confirm your age online? So, I don't know. But she said she's 23. So, we're just going to go with 23 years old. That's what came out of her mouth. And then Aisha, who is the co-founder, she's 23. Then Alina, she's 25. Summer 21. Ava is 20 to 21. Not quite sure. Then Lexi is 25 to 26. Then Piper is 18. Listen, I swear they changed their members every 2.5 seconds.
Like honestly, keeping up with them is a lot of work. And also, I really don't want to keep up with them. Like 1 second, Joy was in the Bob House, now she's not, but now she's making content with them. And then also, what's her face? I mean, Camila, she just left recently. I made a video about her, too, so y'all can check that out as well.
Then Sophie Rain, she left as well, but I swear she's back cuz she's making content with them. So, I couldn't tell you who's in and who's not. It is really confusing. Just go on their TikTok and then check the videos. Then you'll see who's in it or not, cuz they really just switch up every 2.5 seconds. My brain hurts. But Piper is the youngest member by a significant margin. And the house is not a peer group at all. It is a business structure built around shared audiences. And Piper's audience that was built over a decade of child content is one of the most valuable audiences on the internet. They're large, they're loyal, they're young, and they're already converted. Imagine how many young girls looked up to Piper. Maybe they still do. I don't know. But she made a lot of content. She was insanely popular. 12 million subscribers, breaking in that money. She was on top of her game during her peak. So, just imagine how many young girls look up to her. And now she's doing this. I'm like, is this why, this is a conspiracy theory, so I could be wrong. Is this why the Bob House was like, "Okay, let's let Piper join us, dance with us, and eventually join OAF because she has a large audience of young girls who look up to Piper. And if they see Piper doing OAF, they might be like, "Oh my god, I want to do it, too." Especially if Piper is posting $2.9 million in one day. If you're 16 years old and you live in this world, this crazy economy, and you see someone making $2.9 million in one day just by posting their body, wouldn't you not be intrigued by that? Yes. And the Bob House knows that. But let me talk about Sophie Rain real quick because she seems very close with Piper. It looks like she might be her mentor. I really don't know cuz they're always doing interviews together. They're always together. I wouldn't even be surprised if they film content together for OAF.
Maybe not now, but maybe when they want to break records or something. I don't know. But anyways, Piper and Sophie, they are always together. But she is central to understanding how and why the Bob House operates and why so many young girls aspire to be like her or to join OAF. So Sophie Rain grew up in a house depended on food stamps. She entered OAF after being fired from a waitressing job and she claims to have earned $43 million in her first year on the platform and then apparently she earned 50 million by 2025 and over 95 million across two years by November 2025. She is literally the face of what OAF success looks like to young girls watching from their phones. I am certain that so many young girls, young women out there have joined this platform because of her or are waiting to join the platform because of her. I will come back to Sophie because she is an important part of this episode. But it seems like the Bob House members, they are all in their 20s, so they're older than Piper, which is expected, but they're somewhat close to her ageish.
Well, I guess Ava is what? Ava's 21, so she's kind of close, but other than that, everyone is older. Question three, where did the $500,000 a month go? This is the question that y'all have been wondering. Y'all have been asking, and I have been asking it, too. I mean, I asked it in my video. I was like, where the f did this money go? Because half a millie a month is an insane amount of money to make. So, how like where did it go? Like, I'm confused. Was bringing in around $500,000 a month.
So, half a million a month.
Y'all just sit with that for a second.
Imagine making that much money before you're even a teenager. Y'all, I'd be set for life. I WOULD BE SET. THAT'S WHY WHEN WE get into her later career decisions, I'm like, why does she have to do what she's doing now? Why did she have to join OFA if at one point she was making half a million per month? Why was Piper on OF when she was supposedly making half a million a month? This number was confirmed by the Netflix documentary Bad Influence that was about Tiffany, who was Piper's mom, and Piper herself. Court documents cited by the LA Times placed peak earnings at around $625 a month. And annually, her company, Piper Rockel, Inc. was reportedly generating between 4.2 million and 7.5 million from 2019 to early 2022.
That's a lot of money. That's annually, y'all. Yeah. But despite making that much money during her child influencer career, she still launched her OF page, framing it as a financial necessity. And as soon as she did it, she apparently was able to afford a car for her grandmother, and she was able to support herself and support her family. And I'm like, with that money that you're making before as a child influencer, y'all didn't get the car for your grandma before, why do you have to get it now?
Why do you have to start an OF page to do that? Like, I'm just Where's the money? In January 2022, 11 former members of Piper Squad filed a lawsuit in Los Angeles County Superior Court.
Their original claim was $22 million in damages. And the allegations in this particular lawsuit are some of the most disgusting things I've ever had to read in my life. It's actually disgusting.
And it's crazy that no one knew that this was going on when they were posting on YouTube. Everyone just thought that all the kids were having fun and it was a vibe and it was just like a fun day for the kids. In this documentary, they discussed emotional, verbal, physical, and at timesual abuse. The kids were not getting proper meal breaks and they were also suing Tiffany for failing to compensate these child performers for their work. Tiffany also allegedly did not give them proper breaks or onset schooling. and wet squad members would leave Piper Squad. Apparently, Tiffany would send bots to the former squad members channels to destroy their channel. Yeah, like low-key insane.
Karen Joy, who was a former squad member, when she was 11 years old, she alleged that Tiffany, Piper's mom, asked her if she had performed oral sex and said she would show her just one try on Hunter.
Yeah. So, Tiffany allegedly said that to Karen, who would have been 11 years old at the time, and Hunter would have been 22 to 23 years old. Call the police.
Hunter Hill was Piper's cameraman and also editor and also the boyfriend of Tiffany. Allegedly, when Hunter first started working with Tiffany and Piper, he was around 20 years old. And Tiffany is about 15 years older than him. So, he moved into their home and was introduced to Piper's audience as her older brother. He was a 20-year-old man living with a child influencer being presented as a family member to millions of viewers. Yeah, the origin story between Hunter and Tiffany is just weird when you think about it. Cuz if you look at the earlier videos, Hunter was making videos with Piper and Piper kept calling him her older brother, but he's not. So, do what you want with that information.
Then also, Rean Fingles, he's a former squad member. He alleged that Tiffany forcibly kissed him twice during a live stream when he was only 17 years old. Hi also said that she had provided alcohol to underage attendees, but this video was wiped from the internet by the next morning, but people have already seen the video, so it's too late. The Netflix documentary Bad Influence covers Tiffany and Piper and all that nonsense. They cover it in detail, so if you are interested in that, definitely watch the documentary. I found it interesting. In this documentary though, the kids alleged that Tiffany kept saying that sex sells. Sex sells. And she would tell the kids to make it sexy. wear a sexy outfit. Look sexy on the thumbnail. Like you have to look sexy. And she was saying this to kids. Children, y'all.
Like they're like 10, 11, 12. Like children. The kids were allegedly instructed to stick out their butts and suck in their stomachs for thumbnails.
And they were pushed into having relationships and being couples for the content because relationship content that does well on YouTube. Honestly, this was a lot. And this is why I'm like, we don't need child influencers because literally, who are you influencing? And the laws in place for child influencers is not strong enough, especially during the squad era. Like it simply was not strong enough. And that's why a lot of these kids, they went through some traumatic things allegedly by Tiffany. The case settled in October 2024 for 1.85 million without admission of fault. So that's why I keep saying allegedly. But let me tell you about the Kugan Law real quick. The Kougan law was passed in 1939 after the child's actor Jackie Kugan discovered that his parents had spent pretty much all of his film earnings. He was one of the top child actors back in the day. And his parents, I believe it's his mother and his stepfather. They just pretty much spent all of his money. So imagine working until you're like 5 years old. You get to 18 years old expecting to have all this money and you have pretty much nothing cuz your parents spent it all.
I'm throwing hands. Like hands will be thrown. Call the police cuz it's Yeah.
like no. So he sued his parents and I'm pretty sure he was successful, but I don't believe he got all of his money back. But after this happened, they created a law which is called the Kougan law. So it requires employers of child performers to place at least 15% of the child's gross earnings in a protected trust account accessible upon adulthood.
So once they turn 18, they can access their money. But this law does not cover child social media influencers. Not even close. which means that every dollar generated since Piper was 8 years old onwards was controlled entirely by the adults around her with zero legal protection. However, Illinois has extended Kougan law protections to child influencers and that was back in July 2024. And California signed legislation in September 2024 requiring 65% of earnings to be placed in a trust effective January 2025. And as of June 2025, 16 states have introduced this legislation. But for Piper, those laws, they came too late. Recently, Piper's grandmother appeared on ABC Night Line, and this is what she said regarding OAF.
I think it's just the next thing. I mean, you cannot be 18 and doing pranks on people on Dancing on TikTok Forever.
I am very proud of the decision she made. It is a lot of money, and I am happy for her. Tell me you're pimping out your granddaughter without telling me that you're pimping out your granddaughter. What? What was that? That That's a crazy response. Like, that's genuinely crazy. Your granddaughter is doing OF and you're happy because she's making a lot of money. Call the police.
>> I think this amount of money does hurt me. I'll just make it back in an hour.
She paid my house off number one. And this was before she started OAF. She brought me a Bronco and she said that she doesn't want me working anymore.
I'm not going to fight with her cuz literally what type of grandmother is this? At this point, her whole family has failed her. Everyone is just a leech and they just want her to make as much money as possible. When she was a child, she made the money, but now she's 18, so she got to do this to make the money.
So, here's what I'm thinking. It seems like Piper's family may have spent a lot of the money or pretty much all of it.
Uh that's cuz that's what it's giving right now. They did have a pretty big house. Like I don't know if it was a mansion, but it looked pretty big cuz I mean they could afford it because the company was making a lot of money. So I'm thinking that they spent most of that money. Also, they had a lot of cats. I don't know if they still have cats, but like that was kind of her brand just having a bunch of cats in the house. So obviously cats are not well I mean maybe one cat is kind of cheap or affordable but to have multiple cats you have to feed them like bathe them do all that type of stuff. So they had a lot of cats maybe the cats made them go broke but also remember the lawsuit it settled for 1.85 million almost 2 million. Maybe that really drained their bank accounts but personally to me it feels like the money was mishandled. It was not handled properly. Then also the lawsuit. Then also the legal fees and all that. Yeah, maybe it drained their accounts, but overall I can tell that the money was not handled right and because there were no laws in place to protect Piper's money, she's doing OAF now. Question four, did the brand army policy changes push her towards OAF? This is the last question we will cover, but it was a major one cuz people brought it up too and I was like, "Oh, like T." The fact that y'all brought it up made me think, so I had to do some research into it.
So, Brand Army is a subscriptionbased content platform which has a similar structure to OAS, but you cannot be explicitly nude there. Piper joined this platform in early 2025 and she was making most of her money from Brand Army at the time before transitioning to OF.
But here is a structural problem that no one was really talking about when Brand Army was a thing. To be honest, to this day, I'm surprised that Brand Army was not a big deal. Like why wasn't people up in arms? Why were people not protesting it? Cuz like the platform was just so messed up. Like it was just weird. I felt like I was the only one talking about it cuz I'm like this platform is weird. Like what the what the f? But anyways, at the time, Brand Army allowed for creators as young as 12 to 13 years old to create content and to sell the content while you had to be at least 18 years old to purchase the content. Yeah, it's weird. Adults are paying subscription fees to minors. And this was allowed for years. Ridicul Like, that's what I'm saying. How the hell do we let this slide? The internet's a scary place, y'all. On December 15th, 2025, Brand Army implemented a major policy change. They closed all junior accounts and banned creators under the age of 18 from creating content, which was major because they were the only platform that were allowing 13-year-olds or minors to sell content to adults. Now, whether that change was triggered by Piper situation or by public pressure, that has not been confirmed. I would like to think that maybe my videos put pressure on them. I don't know, but I mean, I would hope so cuz that policy made no sense. But the timing of everything is worth noting because December 2025, they banned all junior accounts. So, you had to be 18 to create content. And then January 1st, 2026, Piper created her OAF page. However, she would have been 18 years old, though, so she could have been on Brand Army anyway still. She would not have been considered a junior.
But the fact that junior accounts were closed, I don't know how it has affected Brand Army's revenue, their audience, their viewers, their people, because as I said, that was the only platform that offered that. Maybe there are other platforms out there, but I just don't know. Like, I'm not on that side of the internet. But to answer the question about Piper and Brand Army, I feel like she was going to leave Brand Army as soon as she turned 18. Anyways, because it looked like she was gearing up for her OAF launch since she was 17 years old. My hairstyles back in the day were scary. Please don't judge. I did not know what I was doing, but honestly, all I would do was straighten my hair and relax my hair. So, that was essentially killing it. I simply never knew how to properly care for my hair or maintain its length. And then I had a terrible experience with relaxer about 10 years ago. or I went to a salon, they relaxed my hair and it started falling off. So after that, I was like, I completely quit using relaxers. Since that traumatizing experience, I've been natural and I've been on a journey to learn how to actually care for my 4C hair with my focus being on preventing dryness and also maintaining length, which is why I was so excited when Bask and Lather came on my radar. That started when the CEO, Shana's younger sister, had a hair issue that a dermatologist basically wrote off saying that her hair might never grow back. But instead of accepting that, Shana and her mother decided to take things into their own hands. They researched, they formulated, and now we have Baskque and Lather. And also, guess what? Now her sister's hair is down to her hips. We love to see it. And that's why I only use natural products on my hair. So, their hydrating hair mist has been my go-to for fighting frizz and also keeping my hair moisturized when it's in protective styles like these locks. It has aloe vera and avocado oil, so you know the smell is on point. And you can use it over any protective hairstyle on your natural hair. does a really good job at just making sure your hair is moisturized and still being cared for while it's in a protective hairstyle.
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Part two, the new American dream. Okay, let's start the section with a question that I asked on Instagram to get y'all's opinion on this topic. So, I asked, "When young girls say that they want to be adult content creators when they grow up, what do you think shapes that aspiration?" So, 38% of you said that the money they see being made. 40% said the lifestyle being shown online. Then only 5% said a lack of other visible options. And then 17% said society told them that their body was their most valuable asset. Let's just sit with these results for a second because almost four and five of you who voted pointed directly at what is being shown to these girls. It's the money, the lifestyle, the visual economy of private jets and Porsches and million-doll first days. You already knew before this video that the aspiration was being manufactured and being marketed to young girls. That's the whole point. And I feel like the last answer connects to all of the videos I made this year that your body is the most valuable asset.
that connects to Liv Schmidt, Clara Dao, the Cassie Howard, Annne Hathaway, all of my videos. They all have different stories and are in different industries, but the same lesson is being taught to them from the moment that they were old enough to be watched. And one of y'all swiped up real Bo Jack and that's your username. I am assuming that's not your actual name, but anyways. So, they said, I think it's all of these to some extent. When I was in high school, me and my friends would see sex work as the way to get a lot of money without any skill. So, we would always say we would go there if we ended up not getting into college or having a job. Thankfully, growing up, I changed my mind. I hope my high school friends did, too. So, I think it's one and three combined. One was the money that they see being made online. And three was a lack of other visible options. And I can't even lie, I thought the same thing in high school, too. I've talked about it in my previous videos as well, but that's probably back in like 2024, so you'll have to scroll to find that. But yeah, me and my friends, we thought it was so cool. were like, "Oh my god, you know, let's just make money on the side, hustle, sell feet, pictures or sell like photos, go on platforms like OAF to make money because we were seeing all of these ladies make a lot of money." And they made it look fun. They made it look like an easy job and all you have to do is pose, work from home, make a million dollars a day, and your life is set.
Like, that sounds amazing, especially in this economy. So, we all used to think that as well because when you're young, your brain's not developed. You're just not really thinking smart. But as we grew up, of course, none of us are into that. And I hope that most young girls will grow up and realize that it's not all what it seems. Like what is being marketed to us is not the actual reality of the job. And I think a lot of women my age would be lying if they said that thought never crossed their mind.
Because we grew up watching the internet make certain women extraordinary wealthy overnight. And we grew up being told in a thousand different ways that our bodies were our most valuable asset. And sometimes those two things combine in your head in ways that are really hard to untangle, especially as a young girl.
I am grateful that I grew up and I found success in something that I truly enjoy doing. And that is not what, you know, OAF is. And I genuinely hope that that person's high school friends also found their way, too. But here's what I think about now that I am on the other side of that thought. The fact that so many of us had it, that says something about the environment that we grew up in. And honestly, I blame the internet. I mean the internet's great but also the internet has created this illusion that o is the answer and that you can become a millionaire overnight without doing any work when that is really not the case but this environment that we all grew up in Piper Raquel also grew up in this environment as well and it did not protect her it exploited her and now she's officially on o despite making millions during her child influencer career a mess and honestly very sad but anyways thank you all so much for participating in these polls it always makes the videos more interesting If you want to be part of future polls, make sure you follow me on Instagram. It's NKS2DS because y'all should. Now, let's keep on going with the video. Let me tell you something that is no longer a theory when it comes to OAF models. It is now documented and it's a real thing and it's becoming a problem. So, in June 2025, a study was published in the journal Sexuality and Culture. It was conducted by researcher Christelle who is a PhD candidate at the University of Alaka in Spain and the findings are genuinely alarming. The study involved 164 high school students aged 12 to 16, both from urban and rural areas in Spain. So they participated in focus group discussions as part of a broader sex education program. And the researchers use a method called the reflexive thematic analysis to identify reoccurring patterns in how these teenagers describe their understanding of adult content platforms. So here's what they found. Every teenager had a good understanding of how these adult platforms work. like OAF, many were able to describe the business in detail. They understood how subscribers pay for exclusive content, how you can do pay-per-view content, and how a willingness to share more explicit content generally means that you're going to make more money. They understood all of this. The study's author, Crystal, she said, "We were increasingly concerned about the impact of hypersexualized digital culture on adolescence, especially the normalization of platforms like OAF across social media. Although these platforms are legally restricted to adults, minors are not only accessing their content, but also integrating it into their everyday cultural and career aspirations. And the researchers also found that the young girls aged 12 to 16, they found OAF to be an alternative to their career path, especially if they consider themselves the beauty standard.
So, at a young age, these girls, they already know what the beauty standard is, and they know that they can use their looks to their advantage. And it's just so crazy because the beauty standards, they go deep. Like they start when you're literally a child and that is problematic in itself. But definitely with social media, it's getting worse.
Many of these teens actually frame content creation, specifically OAF, as expressing themselves and as a personal choice. They do not see it as exploitation. They were seeing it as empowerment because that's what they see on their screens. That's what the Bob House tells them. The Bob House is like, "Oh my god, it's like a sleepover every night with your best friends and you're making millions of dollars." They market it that way because they know that's going to get the girls to go on the platform. But clearly, it's working because this research is showing that.
But because of how influencing is seen online, the aspiration is real, but the accessibility is not. And the gap between those two things is where a generation of young girls are getting lost. Sophie Rain is the most visible example of this aspiration pipeline right now. And her story is genuinely complicated. Also, she is arguably one of the most successful OF creators out there. And the fact that she looks 16, too, is another layer of her story. So, let me know if you would be interested in a full deep dive on Sophie Ray. I'd be glad to do it if y'all are interested. But, as I said before, Sophie said that she grew up on food stamps. Her family got $400 a week towards their shopping. And she got a job at a restaurant when she was only 17 years old because she wanted to help out. She was working long shifts just to make money cuz I'm pretty sure with waitressing jobs, too, they they don't even pay you minimum wage cuz they expect you to get tips to help with that. So yeah, she's working long hours.
She's on her feet dealing with customers, wanting to move out, but still living at a home. So it was just a lot going on for her. I mean, I feel like a lot of women can relate to this.
A lot of young girls can relate to this, especially when you are in like the high school to college phase. Like you're old enough to do grown stuff, but you're broke, so you can't do anything. And I feel like that tension in your life is just so irritating. Cuz trust me, I went through it. Lowkey still going through it right now because this economy trash.
But while Sophie was working at her job, she noticed something about her older sister, Sierra. So her older sister was already on OAF. And Sophie realized that there was real money to be made when she watched her sister buy a Tesla with her OAF money. If you didn't know, Sophie had a sister and her name is Sierra. But it looks like Sophie has surpassed Sierra in followers and the amount of money on only fans. But right around that same time where Sophie was frustrated with her job and she saw that her sister was doing well, she got fired from her job actually and that was like the push she needed to join OAF. Her older sister Sierra then put Sophie in touch with the man who advised her on how to grow her online presence to direct people on social media towards her OAF profile. Because the biggest thing with OAF is not just posting your content, it's to get people to subscribe to you. With OAF, you typically don't go on the website and just scroll to find people. You typically find them through like Twitter X, Tik Tok maybe, or even Instagram. But after Sophie's sister helped get Sophie on the platform, Sophie was successful right from the get-go. And it's probably due to the fact that she looks like she's 16 years old. Yeah. So, the full picture of Sophie Rain's origin story is this.
She's a teenage girl from a food stamp household. She had a job that did not pay enough and had an older sister who was already on the platform making enough money to buy a Tesla. Y'all, Teslas are not cheap. I feel like Teslas now are common. Well, it's still it's not a cheap car. And then a random male adviser helped her grow her audience and now she's making tens of millions of dollars on OAF. It is a crazy story, isn't it? This male advisor has never been publicly identified, but this is the darker side of OAF that is not being marketed to these young girls when they post online. What a lot of you probably don't know is that there is an entire industry of men who manage multiple women's accounts. And the language they use is about management, agency, and growth strategy. But what it actually looks like in practice is something much darker. Prism Reports published an investigation in January 2024 into what they called of management schemes tracing back to YouTube's manosphere. In the last 18 months, several OAF management agencies have been established across several countries.
These agencies seek out creators to profit from their content, claiming that they can increase that person's income by taking a percentage of their earnings. It's basically low-key highkey modern-day pimping. I mean, like, there are actual agencies that help you grow and make money, blah blah blah. Like, I am signed to an agency right now, but OAF agencies are different because OAF is already seen as, I guess, somewhat a shameful job, and it it's just it's different from obviously posting on YouTube. So, I feel like it's easier for agencies to prey on of creators, but I'm calling it low-key modern-day pimping because who is running these agencies?
It's men. This report found at least two YouTube creators who posted instructions on how to create your own agency and how to recruit the creators and how to also keep most of the profits on YouTube.
Yeah. And the Institute to Address Commercial Sexual Exploitation documented in February 2026 how this works. courses such as Andrew Tate. Do y'all know Andrew Tate, the self-proclaimed misogynist? Yeah, you know him. Isn't he still in jail? I don't even know to be honest. But y'all know him probably. If you don't know him, watch my video I made about him.
I'll link it down below. But anyways, he created Hustlers University to teach men how to create and market management agencies that promise to increase creator subscriber counts and earnings allegedly. So, these so-called managers are encouraged to target not only established creators, but also prospective creators on Instagram and dating apps to leverage their inexperience because if you are inexperienced, it's easier to manipulate you. Managers are allegedly then instructed to secure exploitative contracts granted inflated revenue shares and control over creators bank accounts, allowing the agencies to extract extra profits before distributing any remainder. Like it's like when I was reading this I was like wow. I am not surprised because I I remember I watched a documentary not too long ago. I'm forgetting it right now.
It was about a streamer. It was on Netflix too. Like I'm let me let me let me find it right now. Oh yes. It was Louis Theox. Theox. Yeah. He made a documentary and he was with one of the streamers and that guy said he hates OAF but he manages the accounts of other OAF girls. Like how does that make sense?
You hate OAF. You hate what it is, but you don't care because you want to make money and you're using these girls to make money cuz you manage their OAF page. Like I'm not saying that he does this. This is all alleged, but it it looks like it's a similar thing.
>> You got 500,000 people on your Telegram, right?
>> Yeah.
>> And you're advertising only fans on there.
>> Yeah.
>> Do you think there's a contradiction there?
>> No. Because I openly say I don't give a [ __ ] and I'm doing it for money. Even BuzzFeed News investigated into this whole scheme because y'all, this is actually a thing that's happening and I feel like more people need to talk about it because it is important to know what is going on behind the scenes. But BuzzFeed News investigated one of the most prominent management companies.
They are called unruly agencies. They found that company officials signed clients and hired workers under conditions that locked them into agreements threatening six-f figureure penalties for contract breaches and granting expansive control over their personal lives. In some cases, publishing nude images without their consent. If you have to pay six figures to get out of a contract, don't sign it.
But it looks like they are intentionally choosing people who are inexperienced or who are just vulnerable to sign. That's why I'm saying lowkey modern day pip.
Like what is going on? One of the ladies on OAF has actually sued this agency, but she has remained anonymous to protect herself. So, we're just going to call her Jane Doe. So, she signed with Unruly and another agency called Behave to help her sell her content and to make more money. She said that as soon as she signed, these agencies quickly took complete control over her finances. And they also allegedly leaked sexually explicit content of her without her consent. And when she tried to leave the business relationship, they then threatened her with humiliation and financial ruin. But the crazy part is that this agency, they have already posted her nude photos without her consent on her public page. This is what's happening behind the scenes. And we need more attention to these matters because this is the reality. And that video that they posted to her public page without her consent, that video ended up getting leaked all over the internet. Because typically your O of content, it is easy for it to get leaked to other platforms such as Twitter/X.
Like a lot of freaky stuff is on Twitter. These agencies allegedly also posted a private photograph of her onto someone else's account and they changed her online payment information and rerouted her income from her own bank account into theirs. And when she tried to leave, they threatened to ruin her financially. And this lawsuit was filed in Los Angeles County Superior Court on June 15th, 2021. So these are the things that were alleged in this lawsuit.
However, when Jane Doe did try to take them to court, they filed a motion to force the case into private arbitration, which allows them to deal with the matter away from public record and the court granted it. So whatever happened next, we really don't know because it was behind closed doors and that's the way they like it. But then two more models came forward. Sarah Stage and Jessica Quesada both accuse Unruly of trapping them into exploitative contracts and posting nude and sexual photos without their consent. Despite both women telling the agency that when they first signed they had no interest in posing nude or posting that type of content. But it didn't matter. This agency allegedly still posted those photos. But this is not a fringe operation. This is one of the most well-known management companies in the industry with major clients doing this to women. And this also reminds me of Euphoria too. My recent video I made it.
So definitely go watch it. Like we're seeing with Euphoria season 3, how Maddie is managing Cassie with her OF page. And also how that other guy, I'm forgetting his name, you know, the black guy who owns a strip club. Like he's making money off of women. So it's just very interesting how that's how it used to be back in the day. Like at strip clubs, men would manage women and make money at the strip clubs. But now it's moving to OAF. But this is the industry that Sophie Reigns unnamed male adviser sits in. This is what management looks like for a lot of women on the platform.
And this is the behind the scenes we are not seeing because these agencies of course they don't want this getting out because they want women to sign with them so they can make money off of them.
Like it's actually insane. So funny too because all of these manosphere guys, they talk about how much they hate OF and they hate girls who are or [ __ ] yet they manage a bunch of OF models. Like you're a hypocrite and you have no morals at all. But the young women who are aspiring to be part of this world, they need to be shown this side of OAF.
They need to know the dark side of it. I mean, there's a lot of dark things that come to OAF. But this is a major thing that's not being talked about enough.
And as I said before, remember Piper and Sophie, they seem like they are really close. Like when Piper first went live on her OAF page, Sophie interviewed her for their their little podcast thing.
So, it looks like they are very close.
And I'm sure that Sophie is helping Piper market herself. So, I'm wondering if this unnamed male adviser also helped Piper too with her page because Piper is signed to an agency. Apparently, the Ruthless Media Partners, you know, who I mentioned earlier. Yes, you do because you're paying attention. But I couldn't find much information about them. So, I wonder if this agency is also representing the other women in the Bob House, too, cuz that's what I'm assuming if Piper has joined the Bob House. But here is the thing about OAF and this new American dream. This is what it looks like in 2026. It's not about getting a college degree, getting a good job, getting married, having kids, buying a house. Now, it's all about having a phone, a ring light, and a subscription page, and a whole team behind you that could exploit you and probably will. The aspiration is real, but the accessibility is a lie. And the infrastructure behind the women who make it look easy is the part that never goes viral. Because for every Piper Rockel and Sophie Rain, there are thousands of women uploading content that nobody is paying for. They're just subsidizing the traffic and making the platform valuable, making the algorithm work.
This is the new American dream and it's being sold to 12-year-olds who think that it is a viable career path. Part three, the predator to subscriber pipeline. Now, let's talk about something that nobody is willing to name directly because it is uncomfortable and it implicates not just the platforms but all of us. The New York Times published an investigation in February 2024 titled, "A marketplace of girl influencers managed by moms and stalked by men." And here's what they found.
Meta had identified 500,000 child Instagram accounts being followed by known or suspected predators, half a million. And when reports of explicit messages or predatory behavior directed at those accounts came in, they were typically met with silence or indifference from the platform. silence or indifference from a company worth over a trillion dollars. Yeah, this is the world we live in now. Is it a trillion? Probably a trillion, a billion. Let's find out cuz I don't want to be wrong. Oh, yeah. Over a trillion.
Yeah, crazy. And then a follow-up investigation was done in December 2024 and a documented men using Instagram to groom child influencers. Like, what is going on? First of all, there should even be child influencers. Let children be children. But if you are going to make your child an influencer, you need to be monitoring that account like crazy. These men were deliberately targeting these girls whose faces and bodies were already public and whose routines and locations were documented online. So it made it very easy for them to access them, to talk to them, to find out where they are or what school they go to. PLG research found that 82% of online predators use social media to find information about potential victims. than 59% of sex traffickers use the internet to connect with buyers. And one in seven young people have received sexual messages online. It is honestly insane. Like the internet's great, but it's also a very scary place. And that's why I have no intentions on being like the traditional influencer and vlogging.
I tried it a bit to see if I liked it.
Then I realized that I didn't like it.
But also the fact that people can stalk you, harass you, try to find out where you live, try to find out where you go to the gym. Like it's just insane. So, I personally don't recommend it. I just feel like the cons outweigh the pros, especially when you are a woman. WBR is a radio station based in Boston, Massachusetts. So, they produce long- form investigative journalism and their Here and Now program is a nationally syndicated daily news show. So, in March 2024, this program and ran a segment specifically connecting the child influencer ecosystem to predatory men.
The segment stated that parents monetizing their children's images were coming into contact with men who prey on children. And the journalist who led the investigation, Jennifer Valentino Durz, she framed it as a relationship, a documented connection between the parents building these platforms and the men who were there to consume them. Like ew. Here's what the investigation actually found underneath the surface.
Some parents were not just unknowingly exposing their children. Some were actively selling photos of their daughters to men and offering paid chats with them. Let that sink in. Now, it's not just the predators, too. It's the parents that we have to look at because this is actually insane. That's why I'm saying we do not need any child influencers. Children cannot consent to being public figures, and they personally they shouldn't. Let them live their life. Let them do their thing. And when they're old enough, if they want to do that, go ahead. But the parents who did try to report the creepy men on Instagram or Meta, whatever you want to call it, they were met with pretty much silence. Like nothing was done to prevent this from happening again. And nothing was done as well to take down these weird men's account. I remember in one of my earlier videos, it's the if you're under 18, you should not look like this. I found this creepy guy commenting under Maloo. Um, she's like a influencer. I don't think she does OAF.
I really don't know, but I'll put a picture up on the screen so you know who I'm talking about. But Malu Trevogo I believe is how I say her name. I think I might be wrong but it's okay. Queen of pronunciation period. But anyways, so under one of her post when she was like I don't even know young like maybe under 10 years old this weird man was commenting weird emojis like the water emoji and stuff. So he was commenting that then I clicked on his page and tell me why he was posting photos of himself in children's underwear. It was either children's underwear or bikini like a a bikini for a little girl. So, you could already tell that that this man's not normal and he's a predator. But the fact that it was openly displayed, it was just mindboggling to me. Like, it was actually crazy. And the fact that Instagram is not cracking down on these accounts hard enough is very unsettling considering that they are what worth over a trillion dollars and they are one of the most popular social media platforms out there. Millions, billions of people are on that platform. Is it billions? Well, at least millions are on the platform, including young children.
What mother in this investigation said, "I really do not want my child exploited on the internet, but she has been doing this for so long now. Her numbers are so big. What do we do? Just stop it and walk away." That's why I said like child influencers should not be a thing in the first place. I'm assuming that the money is too good that she doesn't want to walk away because shouldn't your first instinct be to protect your child, to protect your daughter? The world's already creepy as it is and now you're exposing. Like, it's just it's just a lot, y'all. And I've said this so many times, I probably sound like a broken record, but child influencers don't need to be a thing.
Really, they don't. Online safety experts have been raising red flags and recommending specific changes for Meta because there is a large presence of these weird predators who are targeting children, but nothing is being done or not enough is being done because again and again the executives chose profits over safety. And a New Mexico jury agreed with that. In March 2026, very recently, they delivered a 30 $175 million verdict against Meta for knowingly allowing their platforms to become, in their words, the largest online marketplace for predators seeking to exploit children. The answer now is, will Meta pay it? I don't know. But they are worth a trillion dollars. So maybe this is nothing to them. It's probably nothing to them at this point. But let's just bring it back to Piper real quick because it's a lot going on and we could really dive into how messed up Meta is and how messed up this the world of Predators online is. But Piper fits perfectly into the story because her mother was posting images and videos of her when she was only 8 years old on the internet. Her audience was built on Instagram and YouTube. The same platforms that had been documented knowingly allowing predatory men access to child influencer accounts. The same platforms that responded to a reports with silence and indifference. The same platforms that a jury just found liable for $375 million for enabling exactly this. That 58-year-old man did not find Piper by accident. The system built the path, laid it out, and rewarded every step because they simply do not care enough about these predatory men online.
So, let's talk about that interview with Piper Rockel and her supposed top spender real quick.
So, on April 28th, Piper sat across this man. He's 58 years old and he was on her podcast. He was introduced as Dawn and he is her top spending subscriber. He has spent close to $750,000 on her. He bought her a car and paid her $70,000 just to show up to that interview.
Apparently, during this podcast interview, Don said that he had been watching Piper on YouTube for 6 years, meaning that she would have been 12 years old. Yeah. But it doesn't stop there because he kept talking about the fact that she was wearing socks. And he's like, "You should not wear socks around me. You should not wear socks around me." And this exchange, it went viral. People were like, "What the f?"
Because Piper ended up handing him the sock and he took it. Then he left the screen and people thought that he was like chewing on the sock or just god knows what honestly a mess. Like even explaining it I'm getting annoyed because why do things like this exist?
Like it it should not exist. So >> you're wearing socks.
>> Well um I was I was just I I didn't want to, you know, distract you with my feet being out. So I thought maybe wearing socks would be the best thing for today.
>> Sure. If that's what you want, you know best.
>> Honestly, this whole thing is a mess.
And to me, it looks staged. Pretty much everyone thinks that it's staged, but some people also don't cuz I feel like a lot of people are kind of gullible, especially on TikTok. But it looks completely fake. Like no man who's a top spender of Piper Raquel is going to go to her interview and say that he's a top spender and announce that he's been watching her since she was 6 years old.
They're not going to do that. Sorry, 12 years old. To me, it's giving rage bait.
And all the pop house girls, they do it.
I mean, the queen of rage bait though is Bonnie Blue. Speaking of her, I wonder what she's doing now cuz I haven't heard about her in a hot minute. Well, I made a video about her. So, definitely watch that, too, because her story is also a mess. These OAF creators, they rely on staying relevant and just using rage bait to stay relevant. So, I feel like this whole interview was just to get people talking. And I guess it is working. People think that this man is Don Bareris, who is a comedian. And after looking at him, I can confirm that it is indeed Don Baris. I made it hasn't been stated publicly or confirmed, but look at the photos. Look at the videos.
Like this guy, Don Baris, he was clearly hired by Piper's team to do this interview. Like, it's very obvious. Even before people pointed out that this guy Don Baris could be the potential guy, to me, it just looked extremely fake. Like, cuz as I said, no weird guy is going to come on the podcast. If a man who's like in his 50s was following Piper when she was 12 years old and then immediately subscribed to her OF page when she was 18, he's not going to say it. He's not going to go on a podcast publicly and announce it because he knows it's wrong.
And I don't even know why this guy Don Barers took this gig. Like, how much do they pay you? Cuz is it really worth it to pretend to be a predator? No. But despite this interview clearly being fake, my question is, why is this considered entertainment? Why is predatory behavior being normalized now and also being used to market Piper's OF when she's been exploited her whole career? if it was staged. Piper Oll's team made a deliberate business decision to manufacture the appearance of that dynamic for views and subscriptions because in her own words, "This industry is about being relevant. You have to get people to talk." Either way, this clip was filmed, uploaded, and promoted, and watched by millions of people, and it was packaged as entertainment. Someone on Twitter said this, "This is not a fun podcast moment. This is a safeguarding failure that nobody in that room reacted to properly. A safeguarding failure occurs when a person or organization with the duty to protect a child's welfare fails to act on a known or foreseeable risk of harm. It's not just about what happens in one room on one day. It is about the accumulation of failures that allowed that room to exist in the first place. The platform that builds Piper's audience and never asked who was watching, that's a safeguarding failure. The adults who monetized her childhood and wanted her to be sexy, that's also a safeguarding failure. and the law that did not protect her earnings. That's also a safeguarding failure. But the crazy part about this staged interview is the fact that it's probably real. I feel like somewhere out there there's a man who watched Piper as a young girl and now is subscribed to her OF page 100%. But we will never know who they are unless they get exposed cuz they will never show their face ever.
Piper Raquel was never just a child on the internet unfortunately. She was a product built by her mother and amplified by the platforms and consumed by the audience and failed by every system that was meant to protect her.
Until we stop treating the visibility of children as content and until these platforms are held accountable, this conversation is not going anywhere. But the least we could do is spread awareness about it because this is what OAF is. And I feel like it's just being marketed to all these young girls and young women as an amazing option when in reality it is not. And we got to let these girls and young women know before it is too late. So, by the point of this video, you should have been able to answer this question. Does it even matter if Piper Raquel's interview was staged if the outcome still looks the same? Hey everyone, welcome back to another segment of her next move by NK's World. This time we are talking about Piper Raquel. Let's get into it. The first thing I want to say to her is that she's allowed to be angry. Her whole childhood was low-key highkey stolen from her just to make money, just to be a celebrity, just to be very visible in the public eye. That is a lot for a kid to handle. And that's why I say no kid needs to be a child influencer.
Honestly, when they're old enough, they can make that decision. But being highly visible and just not having a normal life and not having a normal childhood, that can really mess you up mentally.
So, she's allowed to be angry because if I was her, I would be angry, too. Next thing is that she can reclaim her narrative. I feel like everyone has ridden her story for her and she's always been controlled by people. And even to this day, she's 18 years old and she's saying that she's claiming her autonomy and doing what she wants. But honestly, it's not like she's doing it to make more money because possibly the money was mismanaged. We don't know.
talked about this in the video, but right now the life she's living, I don't feel like it's her choice. So, she should, well, I hopefully one day she can reclaim her narrative and just figure out what she wants to do with her situation and with her life. And this one kind of piggybacks off the last one.
And I feel like she should take a break from social media cuz she's been visible since she was like what, like I think like seven years old. Like I mean, she was doing her toddler stuff too, like the toddlers and tiara. She she wasn't on toddlers and tiaras, but she did like pageantry when she was younger. So, I feel like she does need to take a break from being in the public eye because she's literally been in the public eye before she really even knew herself. So, she should take a break and figure out what she wants to do. Cuz at this point, I don't know what she wants to do, but I feel like what she's doing right now is not what she wants to do. It's literally just to keep the money flowing and because her brand has been ruined, but not by her, but because of her mom. So, it's a mess. And I hope that she's able to figure it out one day. But as for now, let me know what y'all think about this video. And also, comment down below Piper's next move. Let us know. Let us help a girl out. Thank you guys for watching and I'll see you next time.
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