View Gallery
George Santos The 35-year-old former U.S. congressman is pursuing a different path after being expelled from Congress. He launched an OnlyFans account earlier this week and explained his reasons for choosing the platform in a series of new posts. Tweet.
“This is the moment you’ve all been waiting for!” Santos began her message via X (formerly Twitter) on Thursday, June 19. “Only on #OnlyFans you get behind the scenes access to everything I’m working on. See you there!”
The former politician’s account will charge a monthly subscription fee of $29.99.
This is the moment you’ve all been waiting for!
only #OnlyFan Will I get full behind the scenes access to everything I’m working on?
See you all there! https://t.co/vYviMechYB
— George Santos (@MrSantosNY) June 19, 2024
In response to Santos’ announcement, several X users voiced their opposition to Santos’ choice of platform, with one user tweeting that “Gross unfollowed me,” to which Santos responded, “You know this isn’t just a content platform.” [porn]? lol.”
The same commenter echoed Santos, saying, “That’s true, and Playboy Is it for an article?
“Again, not all content on OnlyFans is pornographic,” Santos shot back, before clarifying, “Nothing sexual” with a vomit emoji.
Ok, so you’ve all got your pants stuffed…
For fans only. Not adult content.
I wanted to make a fuss so I decided to keep it just for fans. People should stop being so sensitive… https://t.co/orhSGlccJy
— George Santos (@MrSantosNY) June 19, 2024
Another user wrote: “Not Patreon. [OnlyFans]When asked, “Why is that?” Santos responded, “It’s boring… I need to stir things up!”
Santos doubled down on that sentiment in a follow-up tweet, writing, “Ok everyone got pissed…Fans only is not adult content. I wanted to cause a ruckus so I decided to make it fans only. People need to stop being so sensitive.” [sic]…”
The New York City native was expelled from Congress last year after being indicted on felony charges in May, following an investigation into his assets that led to him being charged with seven counts of wire fraud, three counts of money laundering, one count of theft of public funds and two counts of making material false statements to the House of Representatives, and later with 10 additional counts including identity theft and falsification of records.
Santos has pleaded not guilty to all charges but is expelled from the House of Representatives in December 2023.