Why OnlyFans’ Annie Charlotte Won’t Participate in ‘Competitive Sex’ Trend

sabit-banner

OnlyFans star Annie Charlotte has found her niche on the platform — and it’s not as a part of the “competitive sex” trend.

“I’m not a fan of this. Well, to be honest, I’m like, ‘Do what you want to do.’ It doesn’t faze me whether you have sex with one person or you have sex with 10,000 people in 24 hours. Like, I don’t care,” Charlotte, 26, exclusively told Us Weekly. “Personally, it’s just not for me.”

Charlotte explained that she has preferences when it comes to her sexual partners, something she would worry about regulating if she were to have events with the public.

“I like the dick to be a good size. The general public, what if they turn up and they have a micro penis? I’m not doing that,” Charlotte said with a laugh. “That’s my argument against it for me personally. It’s a no from me.”

How Harmful Is the OnlyFans ‘Competitive Sex’ Trend? Experts Weigh In

She continued, “I really want to be more involved in mainstream porn. I think that stuff’s really cool, but I’m not about having sex with the general public. I don’t mind if I met someone on a night out and I hit it off, that would be fun. But like, these whole sex days, no thanks.”

The “competitive sex” trend has taken OnlyFans by storm, with creator Bonnie Blue claiming she set a world record for sleeping with 1,057 men in 12 hours — a feat that Australian star Annie Knight was on track to beat when she had sex with 583 men in six hours.

Charlotte, however, has separated herself on the platform as a creator with her unique uterus didelphys — meaning, she has two vaginas, two uteruses, two cervixes and an ovary on each side. She learned of the diagnosis when she was 16 years old, initially asking doctors if she could “get rid” of the condition before deciding to embrace it.

“I’m bloody glad I didn’t [have surgery], because Jesus Christ, what would I be doing for my life right now? I literally don’t even know,” she said with a laugh. “It’s, like, my whole personality trait on the internet.”

Charlotte launched her OnlyFans account five years ago, initially keeping her account “private.” When Charlotte told fellow OnlyFans creators about her rare diagnosis — which she has learned to navigate with a lot being “unknown” — they recommended she advertise that on her page.

Everything We Learned from OnlyFans’ Annie Knight: Earnings, Sex Logistics

“I gave it a go, and I started making stupid money,” she said. “And then I realized, ‘What am I doing?’ I nearly ended up dropping out of uni, but my mom was like, ‘You’re not dropping out of university.’ She was like, ‘You’re finishing your degree.’ She was like, ‘You could do this on the side and then when you finish your degree, you could do it full time.’ I finished my degree and then I just started doing all of this.”

Charlotte shared that plugging her diagnosis on a “mainstream scale” changed her life financially. She went from making about $4,000 to $5,000 to racking up between $30,000 and $70,000 each month.

“I think I was just lucky enough that I could sell my two vaginas on OnlyFans and that it’s something that’s marketable in that space,” she said. “I’m very fortunate for that. I’d never take them for granted because it’s such an oversaturated market these days that I’m so lucky I have a USP [unique selling point]. I think that it is a really cool thing.”

The U.K. creator shared that she hopes she can pursue other avenues of raising awareness for her condition.

“I’d like to be able to take it further than just, obviously, having OnlyFans,” she said. “I’d love to be able to change the space for women in gynecology like, and allow for there to be more care in the healthcare system for women and all of that kind of stuff.”

To learn more about the serious potential risks and harms of “competitive sex” and other explicit OnlyFans content — read what doctors, mental health professionals and other experts told Us Weekly here.