Skip to main content

Home Life

Inside the shocking rise of OnlyFans sex stunts – and why Drake Von is serious about 1,000-man marathon (EXCLUSIVE)

Von’s planned stunt could push adult content to a new extreme. But as he and Jak White tell Attitude about similar ambitions, has shock-value already peaked?

By Callum Wells

Jak White and Drake Von pose shirtless
Jak White and Drake Von (Image: Attitude; Instagram/Drake Von; X/Jak White)

Las Vegas likes to believe it has seen everything. The city built its reputation on excess: wedding chapels open at 3am, roulette wheels spin through sunrise, huge hotel suites accommodate raucous stag parties. But sometime later this year, if all goes to plan, a hired venue will host an event even Vegas has never witnessed before. Behind it is 23-year-old Drake Von, one of OnlyFans’ top 0.1 per cent earners. His plan is stark in its ambition: one top having sex with 1,000 bottoms in one day. Restricted to paying subscribers, the event is being marketed as both a record-breaking feat and a public lesson in safer sex.

What started as a half-joking response to the four-figure heterosexual sex marathons carried out by fellow OnlyFans stars Bonnie Blue, 26, and Lily Phillips, 24, has now crossed into gay territory. Von has confirmed that preparation for the stunt is almost complete, with casting in motion and logistics advancing. As of the time of publishing, no footage has surfaced and no final date has been set beyond “this year”, but planning is well underway.

Von explains the inspiration for his sex stunt with the breezy confidence of someone who has watched virality take the steering wheel in his life. “It was something I announced a while ago… as more like a joke and a gag,” he tells me over video call (I may have expensed an OnlyFans subscription to get in touch with him!). The escalation was gradual at first. He had already been doing larger group scenes, posting teasers, building momentum through his social channels. “But then it started getting picked up by news articles and started going viral out of nowhere.” 

Although Drake Von is bisexual, the stunt is framed squarely in gay male terms

Von tells how fans from his professional studio porn days (he started OnlyFans a few months after entering studio work, driven by direct requests from fans) kept asking for more, and the algorithm rewarded the escalation. Teasers on TikTok and Instagram spread the idea, group content went viral, and so the internet decided the stunt would take place IRL. “All right,” he says, recalling his decision, “I think I have to actually commit to it and be serious about it.”

While his twin brother Silas Brooks and fellow OF creator Braxton Stone have also teased plans to carry out the same 1,000-man sex feat, Von claims he is the “one that’s actually more serious” of the three.

@drakevonx

It’s finally happening! Beating Bonnie blue, can I take them all?

♬ Shake It To The Max (FLY) (Remix) – MOLIY & Skillibeng & Shenseea

Although Von is bisexual, the stunt is framed squarely in gay male terms. His fanbase, he explains, responds more strongly to gay content. The 1,000-bottoms idea fits that dominant niche perfectly – with gay men as participants, it’s gay hookup culture scaled to extreme proportions.

“Never say never. Maybe there’ll be ‘1,000 and Jak White’ coming soon” – White on planning a similar feat

The production costs for the stunt are substantial, and the financial target is explicit. “Definitely 100k plus, six figures for sure,” Von predicts. He already clears $60,000-$70,000 in a strong month from his existing content, working “pretty much all day, constantly pushing fresh content”. “It’s a hard job constantly having to be doing some new things to stay relevant, to stay active,” says Von. He admits that exhaustion creeps in sometimes but frames it as part of the work: “At the end of the day, it is my choice and it is something that I like doing.”

He insists the stunt has a purpose that extends beyond profit: “I want everyone to be as good. If not [using] protection, rapid [testing]… all that good stuff.” Safer-sex education, he says, is baked into the concept. Yet the phrasing is vague and the logistics, inevitably, raise questions. How can he ensure consistent protection across 1,000 penetrations? How will he monitor physical limits in real time? He dismisses the backlash. “At the end of the day, I don’t care what they think. I just kind of ignore it and laugh,” he says.

The most prominent gay voice on record from an event of this magnitude is Jak White. The 20-year-old OnlyFans performer took part in Bonnie Blue’s February “breeding mission” – 400 men, mouth swabs for basic screening, no condoms, and a consequential pregnancy announcement that later turned out to be fake. White describes the day with Blue as “one of the most interesting days of my life”. It was also lucrative. He made serious money from the footage, which he now sells across platforms including Fansly. “I worked with her on many occasions and I just love the way that she does events,” he says. “It’s game-changing.”

Reaching orgasm while having sex with Blue was “the hardest part” because of his sexual preferences, he admits. The physical and mental toll of performing straight content for gay viewers adds another layer of complexity. “People want to see me do this content,” he notes. “The amount of people I have in my messages messaging me to do straight content because they find it sexy.” 

While the “pregnancy” news caught him off-guard, White assures me he arrived three hours into the event, adding, “Things are quite busy for me, so it’s not like I’ve even had a second to sit down and think about it.” He is already contemplating his own scaled-up sex event too, though he is taking a cautious approach. “Considering the logistics requires a lot of things,” he tells me. “Never say never. Maybe there’ll be ‘1,000 and Jak White’ coming soon.”

“Once someone [has] slept with a thousand men, is 10,000 that much more exciting? – Emma Gillman, founder of PR brand The Siren Group

Maximising the profit from such an event means getting as much exposure as possible. Emma Gillman, founder of PR brand The Siren Group and former publicist to Blue (early in her rise) and now to Phillips, explains her role. She does not scout venues or manage queues; her role is narrative and messaging. “I’m not taking names and numbers in line,” she explains. “I’m kind of going, ‘OK, we’ll start discussing the challenge three weeks before. On the day, make sure that you’re capturing some content that explains how you’re feeling at each stage, and then afterwards we want to recap one week later, we want to recap a month later.’”

Her involvement begins earlier than most realise. Creators often come to her after seeing the media traction others have garnered through such events. Gillman starts with a conversation that covers background, motivation, authenticity. If the pitch is “I want to get famous like them” or “I want to make the same money,” she usually walks away. “The level of marketing and brand building before a stunt even happens is extremely high,” she notes. “A stunt itself doesn’t generate any money. The money comes from selling the content in an engaging way, attracting new subscribers.” The real work is in the framing: how the creator wants the story received. For some, it’s pure enjoyment and kink. For others, it’s exploring the aftermath. She treats each case individually, checking if the person is “mentally tough enough to understand the consequences”.

For her part, she believes the 1,000-person format has already peaked. “Once someone [has] slept with a thousand men, is 10,000 that much more exciting? Is it worth the mental strain, the physical strain? Not really.” She believes the escalation has diminishing returns. Public appetite is waning, and creators must now build brand equity in subtler ways – through consistency and unique angles – rather than relying on sheer numbers.

This is an excerpt from a feature appearing in Attitude’s May/June 2026 issue.