
Bonnie Blue has triggered another wave of online fury after claiming she has slept with 'hundreds and hundreds' of men while pregnant, telling critics that her baby is still 'healthier' than them.
The English adult content creator, whose real name is Tia Billinger, made the remarks in a viral 'bump update' clip that spread across Instagram, X and TikTok this week. The backlash comes after her heavily criticised baby shower content, which reportedly involved multiple men and was filmed for subscribers.
Bonnie Blue's Pregnancy Claim Fuels Fresh Backlash
Bonnie Blue wants to give everyone an update😶 pic.twitter.com/eLp8xaLlwa
— Brandon (@LibOrNormal) June 25, 2026
In the clip, Blue framed the criticism as jealousy rather than concern. 'I'm pregnant, and I have taken hundreds and hundreds of men whilst carrying a baby,' she said. 'My baby is still healthier than you. You're fat, you're ugly, you're broke, your teeth are yellow, and God knows what else is wrong with you. But me and my baby, we're healthy and rich.'
The quote quickly moved beyond her paying audience and landed in the wider social media cycle, where users debated whether the video was a genuine defence, a marketing tactic or both. Several reposts described the comments as rage-bait, while others said the issue was not her work as an adult performer but the way her unborn child had become part of the spectacle.
Blue has repeatedly built her public profile around extreme sexual claims and viral adult-content challenges. Her online biography lists her as an English pornographic film actress who became widely discussed after claiming to have had sex with 1,057 men in 12 hours in January 2025, followed by further controversial stunts and a move away from OnlyFans after a platform ban.
Why Critics Say the Baby Has Become Part of the Brand
The latest outrage did not appear out of nowhere. Earlier reports claimed Blue turned a baby shower into subscriber content involving several men, before later posting the 'bump update' that sparked the current criticism. The same report said she had claimed to have slept with 'hundreds' of men while pregnant and included her direct quote about her baby being 'healthier' than critics.
That context is why the conversation has grown beyond adult entertainment gossip. Viewers are now arguing over whether pregnancy, motherhood and an unborn child should be used as part of a shock-content strategy. It has also raised questions about how creators monetise moral outrage, especially when clips move from paywalled adult platforms into mainstream feeds where they can reach users who never searched for them.
Blue also hit back at married women who criticised her, presenting her earnings and independence as proof of empowerment. 'Don't shame me for being the best feminist out there,' she said in a second clip. 'For doing what I want, when I want, with my baby, whilst pregnant. I'm a millionaire, I run my own business, and I do whatever I want, including doing your husband.'
Health Concerns Enter the Online Debate
There is currently no public indication that any authority has taken action over Blue's pregnancy content, and there is no verified evidence that she has broken the law. Still, the health angle has become a major part of the online reaction because pregnancy does not protect a parent or baby from sexually transmitted infections.
The National Health Service says many Sexually Transmitted Infections have no symptoms, but can affect a baby's health during pregnancy and after birth, advising anyone who believes they or their partner may have an STI to seek a check-up as soon as possible. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention also states that pregnancy does not protect women or babies from STIs and advises testing as part of routine care.
For Blue, the backlash has once again kept her name at the centre of the internet's most uncomfortable debate. Her defenders argue that adults can make their own choices and that criticism of her pregnancy content is often tangled with stigma around sex work. Critics counter that the issue is not simply sex work, but the decision to make an unborn child part of a viral content cycle built on shock, insults and paid curiosity.
The result is another Bonnie Blue scandal that has moved faster than the facts around it. Her claims remain self-reported, her numbers are not independently verified, and the public conversation is being driven largely by reposted clips and outrage. What is clear is that her latest pregnancy comments have turned a private health milestone into a viral flashpoint, with her baby now pulled into the same attention economy that made her famous.










