
She grew up in the kind of small-town Northern California that doesn't get mentioned in travel pieces. Hair styling was her first real trade — practical, skilled work that paid the bills after high school. Go-go dancing came next, then stripping, and somewhere in that stretch Playboy reached out without her having chased them. The call led to their Culver City studio, which turned out to be a side door into a wider industry: music videos, editorial photographers, the Mansion. Hustler followed. The path wasn't planned so much as accumulated, one unexpected contact after another. She has described herself as direct and plainspoken, which tracks with how she handled webcam work — she's spoken in interviews about a session where a recognizable NFL player turned up on the other end, which she recounts with more amusement than reverence. What her life looks like now is largely quiet on public channels. No active social footprint has surfaced, which, for someone who came up partly through live webcam, reads less like disappearance and more like a deliberate step back.
The Ten
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