A 360-kilogram sex worker bragged about how she earns 5 thousand dollars a month (4 photos)
The 850-pound fetish model makes $5,000 a month doing bizarre jobs, including playing a giant who eats tiny people.
Rinaye Starr, 44, from Holiday, Florida, weighed 330 pounds before a car accident in 2009 that broke her right leg and has since doubled her weight.
In 2020, she began doing fetish work online and for magazines, appearing on pinup sites and OnlyFans.
Her career began in 2008, and she has nearly 3,000 subscribers across nine platforms, as well as doing phone sex. Rinaye works about eight hours a day, creating custom videos for clients.
The model's specialties include feederism, where sexual pleasure comes from gaining or helping others gain fat.
Despite her size, the American insists that she prioritizes her health and has a fulfilling life outside of work. She has no plans to lose weight, saying she feels happy and healthy the way she is.
In addition to fetish modeling, Starr has other creative outlets, including tarot readings and a cooking show on YouTube. She says she gets more negative comments on these platforms than she does from her fetish audience.
"In the fetish world, people come because they like fat women doing fat things," she says. "The sex work industry is incredibly open - they're very accepting of all different body types and abilities. I do a lot of fetishism, particularly feederism - where I eat large amounts of food and gain weight - squashing, where I sit on smaller people. I also do VOR, which is a fantasy where I pretend to be a giant and eat tiny people. I've done a blueberry fetish, inspired by Violet Beauregarde from Willy Wonka, where I'd cover myself in blue paint. I've played a breeding cow, a piglet who eats on all fours - there's a lot of acting and overacting to bring those fantasies to life."
Rinaye began modeling after being inspired by a plus-size woman she saw on MySpace 20 years ago.
"She was doing pin-ups and wearing outrageous clothes. At the time, I didn't know any plus-size women who dressed like that. I was trying to impress her, so I started uploading pictures of myself in pin-ups, hoping to get her attention," she said, noting that she weighed about 260 pounds at the time. "It seems like very little to me now."
The attention did come, but not from the woman she admired.
"Her webmaster contacted me and asked if I wanted to be a model. That was my introduction to fetish modeling," the American added.
Since then, Starr has built a successful career, earning around $5,000 a month creating content for a niche audience that embraces her size and creativity.
"Everyone has different fetishes that sell," she explains.
Despite the different perceptions of the industry, Starr emphasizes that fetishism is not just about sex: "In regular porn, people often conform to conventional beauty standards, but fetish modeling is different. People don't necessarily need a sexual component to enjoy it. It's about niche, fantasy, and sometimes just aesthetics."
Starr's success has allowed her to work primarily solo, but over the years she has collaborated with a variety of models, including petite people, extreme bodybuilders, and other plus-size performers.
"A lot of fetish work is about extremes - whether it's extremely muscular, extremely fat, or extremely small," she explains. "I've also worked with other disabled sex workers because it allows you to work from home and create art on your own terms."
Her disability, the result of a car accident, has changed her life, but it hasn't defined her career.
"I was about 330 pounds at the time, but I've gained a lot of weight since then," she says. "People think I'm in poor health because of my size, but my labs tell a different story. I take vitamins, I live an active lifestyle that works for me, and I take care of myself. I don't have any plans to lose weight."
Starr, who performs on OnlyFans and other similar sites, is also transparent about the financial realities of the industry.
"I charge $15 a minute for a custom video, a minimum of 10 minutes, so I can make $150 on just one request," she said. "But then there are the business costs — props, costumes, travel, paying other people. The income varies depending on how much content I put out."
Ultimately, she considers herself an ordinary person with an extraordinary job: "I like to cook, garden, do crosswords - the usual stuff. My job might be out there somewhere, but I just live my life like everyone else."