Current:Home > reviewsTrace Cyrus, Miley Cyrus' brother, draws backlash for criticizing female users on OnlyFans -Thrive Success Strategies
Trace Cyrus, Miley Cyrus' brother, draws backlash for criticizing female users on OnlyFans
View
Date:2025-04-17 08:48:25
Trace Cyrus should leave the girl talk to the girls.
Cyrus, former guitarist of pop rock band Metro Station and brother of pop star Miley Cyrus, drew backlash on social media when he criticized women who create sexual content on the online platform OnlyFans in a Wednesday post on X, formerly known as Twitter.
OnlyFans is a social media network, like Instagram, YouTube and Facebook, where creators can earn money from users – the "fans" – who pay a monthly membership fee to access their exclusive content. The platform has become synonymous with the adult entertainment industry and sexual content.
While Cyrus said he knows "some amazing girls" who are OnlyFans creators, many of these women "have lost their chance of ever settling down with a good guy with morals."
"They get a lot of attention from guys on (OnlyFans), so they think they have options," Cyrus wrote. "But any guy who is so desperate to see sexual content they are willing to pay for it is a desperate loser. … They don't look at those women and equate their value as a future wife, mother, or loyal partner."
Cyrus also seemed to take aim at the self-sufficiency female users find in monetizing their content through OnlyFans.
"I just think this independent mindset of not needing a man is extremely toxic and leads to a very lonely future," Cyrus wrote. "Having a good man and a family will bring you more happiness in old age than (OnlyFans) ever could."
Social media users quickly came down on Cyrus for his remarks.
"Genuinely curious: why do you care?" user @ladidaix wrote on X. "Live and let live. No need to project."
"There's a lot of female sex workers married with families, businesses, educations, homes etc. Some are married to sex workers, and some are married to non-sex workers," X user @SybilStalloneTV wrote. "We are valuable humans. Stop devaluing our existence with your platform."
X user @WWKaye wrote sarcastically: "We need to stop this ridiculous idea of women being able to treat their bodies and their time as those belong to them! What a wild concept for women to do what they like and enjoy of their own choosing!"
In an X post Thursday, Cyrus doubled down on his initial criticism. "Most of you have made it clear you're not intelligent enough to make a rebuttal to my statement without verbal abuse and name calling," he wrote.
A slew of celebrities, including Cardi B, Carmen Electra, Bella Thorne, Drea de Matteo and Iggy Azalea, have embraced the subscription-based platform in recent years for the autonomy it's given them over their sexuality and creative life.
"I've made a lot of people so much money off my body, and I got the smallest cut off my own…body, and my own work, and my own ideas," Azalea told Emily Ratajkowski in a February interview. "I don't think I have to be sorry about the fact that I want to commodify my own (stuff)."
Electra, who launched her OnlyFans profile in May 2022, said the platform gave her the "opportunity to be my own boss and have my own creative vision to share with my fans without someone standing over me."
"People are going to do what they want to do anyway with your photos," Electra told People magazine at the time. "You might as well be in control of them and follow what you feel like doing inside."
Thorne quickly cashed in on the platform and became the first OnlyFans creator to earn $1 million dollars in under 24 hours, according to Paper Magazine.
"OnlyFans is the first platform where I can fully control my image: without censorship, without judgment, and without being bullied online for being me," Thorne told the outlet in August 2020.
More:Drea de Matteo, Adriana La Cerva on 'The Sopranos,' launches OnlyFans account
More:Celebrities you can see on OnlyFans: Jordyn Woods, Carmen Electra, Bella Thorne and more
Contributing: Pamela Avila and Cydney Henderson, USA TODAY
veryGood! (7325)
Related
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Tigers lose no-hitter against Orioles with two outs in the ninth, but hold on for win
- NCAA approves Gallaudet’s use of a helmet for deaf and hard of hearing players this season
- NCAA approves Gallaudet’s use of a helmet for deaf and hard of hearing players this season
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Why is Mike Tyson fighting Jake Paul? He says it's not about the money
- Lil Wayne says Super Bowl 59 halftime show snub 'broke' him after Kendrick Lamar got gig
- Line and Bridge Fires blaze in California, thousands of acres torched, thousands evacuated
- San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
- Oregon DMV mistakenly registered more than 300 non-citizens to vote since 2021
Ranking
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- Clock is ticking for local governments to use billions of dollars of federal pandemic aid
- Workers who assemble Boeing planes are on strike. Will that affect flights?
- Pennsylvania mail-in ballots with flawed dates on envelopes can be thrown out, court rules
- Louvre will undergo expansion and restoration project, Macron says
- Go inside The Bookstore, where a vaudeville theater was turned into a book-lovers haven
- China is raising its retirement age, now among the youngest in the world’s major economies
- Father of Georgia school shooting suspect requests separate jailing after threats
Recommendation
Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
Minnesota school bus driver accused of DUI with 18 kids on board
Throw It Back to the '90s With Old Navy's Limited-Edition Reissue Collection of Iconic Vintage Favorites
Aldi announces wage increases up to $23 an hour; hiring thousands of employees
Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
Harris is promoting her resume and her goals rather than race as she courts Black voters
Ballerina Michaela DePrince, whose career inspired many after she was born into war, dies at 29
Going once, going twice: Google’s millisecond ad auctions are the focus of monopoly claim