Wednesday, June 19, 2019

The False Promises of Passive Income Doing Sex Work

I originally meant to write this blog post first, but this Twitter thread was the result of me wanting to rant.

During my time as an online sex worker (since 2012?) and especially within the past few years, I see articles and social media posts touting the benefits of creating and maintaining passive income, specifically within the adult industry. Some of these are from people who genuinely want the best for their fellow sex workers, and others are from companies...who I hope want the best for their creators.

I'm glad that more and more people are starting to become aware of building passive income, but there are a few big problems I've noticed with trying to make a reality of living off of what you earn passively.

Before I go into that, let me explain passive income for anyone who don't know what it entails: it essentially means that automation and/or outsourcing provide the bulk of the labor, allowing the creator to only put in a minimum amount of active work into creating a long-term source of income. That means, if done successfully, that a person can go weeks or even months without working. For example, a camgirl spends an entire month creating clips and other content, then schedules everything to post on the clip site for the next eleven months.

I love this idea, but through my own experience and looking at how the platforms are built, this isn't as easily achieved as many probably think.

In the same way there is the "get rich quick" sort of mindset, there is also the "I will build long-term passive income by devoting three months to creating content" mindset. Sure, if you make even a few sales after those three months, it's technically passive income, but when people talk about passive income, it is insinuated that you make enough to live off of it.

Making a living as an online sex worker isn't necessarily an easy thing to do, and making a living earned from passive income is even harder. Either way, you have to work hard to build a following (that pays) to ensure longevity.

One of the bigger problems, I think, is that many of the platforms that allow us to sell content aren't good at directing site visitors to clips and profiles, or barely (or outright don't) function as a marketplace, meaning that creators have to direct their own traffic to the virtual storefront in order to make sales. I've found that even sites that do at least a decent job with directing traffic to creators are dependent on new videos being uploaded - so either the creator has to regularly manually publish the videos, or the platform has to have a (good) scheduler option. Personally, I think how the platforms function are a huge obstacle for sex workers to be able to achieve the dream of making sizable passive income.

Excluding ScatShop, I'm currently using nine sites to sell clips. Only two of them - ManyVids and Clips4Sale - have resulted in what I would call a reasonable amount of sales. (My sales on Modelhub haven't been anything to brag about, but I make a decent amount through Viewshare Video earnings, which is what they call what I make from Pornhub Premium.) As a result of dismal sales, I'm not as proactive with uploading clips to the other sites.

Alongside naive mindsets and lackluster platform performances, the third problem I find with achieving passive income is that people throw that word around, not really understanding its meaning. For example, unless you have someone else uploading for you or you have found a way to schedule, having a premium Snapchat isn't earning you passive income, even if you use subscription sites like FanCentro to automatically collect the proper amount from subscribers. If you don't open up Snapchat for two months, nothing is being sent to your subscribers, and while FanCentro may charge them, you'll have some very pissed off (and reasonably so) customers.

If someone says that maintaining a premium Snapchat, being a phone sex operator, public or private cam model, or magazine model are forms of passive income, then they don't know what passive income truly is, unless they suggest a very specific business plan, like outsourcing. Yes, all of these forms of work can help build passive revenue streams, but they're not in themselves a form of it.


Some tips:

  • Take advantage of automation, but take note of its limits. A site may say that it's gonna automatically share new uploads and video sales to Twitter, but with what I've experienced, it doesn't always happen. (While not passive income, I recently became aware of models using bots on Twitter to automatically post on tweets that mention interest in buying videos. Unfortunately, these bots will also post on tweets of people who are under 18.)
  • As a sex worker, you should be aware by now that a hefty portion of your income will go towards taxes. Keep this in mind while determining whether the income you are truly making a livable amount from your passive income or not.
  • Even if you don't care about making a living just on passive income or know you want to actively work for a long time, it's still a good idea to have at least a small passive income stream, which can help you during unexpected or expected slow months (like during the holidays) or if you need to take a break from actively working.

Wednesday, February 13, 2019

Paying Off My Student Loans, One Video at a Time

I graduated college over two years ago. Like many, I felt pressured into taking classes and taking out large loans to pay for them as if this was a rite of passage (and a good investment). On top of it all, I was very naive.

While I don't regret going to college or studying what I did, I sigh looking back on the things I could have changed. Maybe I could have gone to school in a city that had a strip club. Maybe I could have spent more of my breaks working in the strip clubs back home. Maybe I could have focused more on making videos, and directing strip club patrons to them. Maybe I should have worked full-time in a strip club after I graduated for six months to a year. And other non-strip club related thoughts. I can't change any of that now.

I have a lot of student debt. It literally almost increased my cost of living by 100%. To alleviate some of the burden - and to make it more "fun" - I've decided to dedicate some video sales solely to paying off the debt. For example, I will upload some clips to ManyVids, and place them at a discount until my loans are paid off. Somewhat of a win-win: the customers get discounted videos, and I use that money to make a payment. Based off of what I made of those specific videos, I will make an occasional one-time payment, and share the screenshot with an update and the hashtag #TheTrinaStudentLoans to show my followers what is being accomplished. (That doesn't mean those are all of the loan payments I'm going to make.)




In the captions of the videos, I will include a brief explanation of what I'm doing, then link to this post if they want more information. I'm trying to expand to every clip site I can, but that doesn't mean that sales of the same clip will all go towards my student loans. Please read the description of the video, and if it makes no mention of this endeavor, then you'll know that the video doesn't count towards this.

I have a long way to go with paying of these loans. When the time comes to announce the success of my loan payoff, I will post on Twitter and take the discounts off of the pertaining videos. The money from such sales will go towards whatever I please by that time.

To keep up with new content, sales I've made, and announcements, keep tabs on this annoying hashtag - #TheTrinaStudentLoans - and decide whether or not you'd like to chip in.

(Of course, I'll accept donations as well. You can tip me on ManyVids, Pornhub, OnlyFans, MyFreeCams, iWantClips, or FanCentro. If you can provide a note, let me know if you want it to go towards my loans. If the platform doesn't have a message option, reach out to me through DM on another platform or email thornforever@gmail.com to inform me.)





These are the clip sites that I am currently using for this, and I may add more in the future:

ManyVids

iWantClips

MFC Share

Chaturbate

AmateurPorn

Unblur.media

Pornhub

Monday, February 11, 2019

$10,000 Shaved Pussy

Originally posted on Pornhub.

From one of my Pornhub videos.

When I used to cam, I decided that saying I would never shave my pussy (for any amount of money) was close-minded…so I decided to put it out there that I would do so for $10,000.
I have never completely gotten rid of my pubic hair. My preference is to keep it trimmed. Even that doesn’t work out so well, as I often am too lazy or forget to do so. I also sometimes get rid of the hair on my bikini line so that nothing pokes out when I wear a swimsuit.
Some guys would get really offended, and try to charm(?) me into offering a reasonable price, but I would tell them that the point of having such a high price is to get them to stop bothering me about it. And if it so happened that someone actually would pay me that (of course, I would require payment beforehand), then I would get $10,000 out of it.
It’s not like I really give a shit if you “can get another woman for a decent price.” I have standards. I’m not going to shave my pussy for $5, $10, $50, $100, or even $1,000. (I’m also not going to write a 1,000-word erotic story for a measly $10, or do a full nudity show for $2.) I choose my prices, and complain all you want - I don’t give a shit.
So, if anyone has $10,000 they wanna drop on seeing me shave my pubic hair in its entirety for the first time, drop a line. The recording of that will go for $500. Too much for you? I don’t give a fuck.