
She came up on the East Coast, which already makes her something of an outlier in an industry that tends to funnel people through Southern California from the jump. The programming background is the detail that keeps surfacing — it suggests someone who arrived at cam work deliberately rather than accidentally, someone who understood the infrastructure of the business before she was the product being sold. She started on cam, which meant she controlled her own hours, her own room, her own audience before any agency or studio had a say. That foundation matters. By the time she signed with Kendra Lust's talent agency — Lust being a performer who built a brand on her own terms — Dulce had already developed a sense of how this industry worked from the inside out. What she has said publicly about that transition, or about what the programming life looked like before all this, remains largely opaque. She doesn't appear to be the kind of performer who overshares the before.
The Ten
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