
She was eighteen and holding down two jobs in Sacramento — receptionist by day, stripper by night — when the adult industry started to look less like a detour and more like a direction. Her entry into film was girl-girl only, and she kept it that way for several years before eventually crossing into boy-girl work, a line she drew deliberately and moved on her own timeline. The softcore cable circuit — those late-night HBO and Cinemax productions that existed in a strange middle space between film and adult content — was part of her early catalog too, which gave her a kind of range that most performers in her era didn't bother with. What doesn't fit the standard career narrative is the public intellectual side: she has argued for sex education and free speech in venues that weren't designed to be friendly to her, including a debate stage at Yale. Whether that advocacy changed anything is hard to measure, but she kept showing up to those rooms anyway. She has an OnlyFans now, which means the career never fully stopped — it just changed addresses.
The Ten
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