Detroit produced her, and she was in her early twenties when she made the decision that changed everything — though the way she tells it, the decision was almost accidental. She has talked openly about Craigslist being the on-ramp: not a glamorous origin story, not a mentor who spotted her, just the internet's most chaotic marketplace pointing her somewhere unexpected. In an appearance on The Bougie Show she got specific about things most performers leave vague, including why the majority of her work ended up being interracial scenes with white men — a casting reality she addressed directly rather than letting the audience draw their own conclusions. She also talked about no longer being a size queen, which is the kind of candid personal evolution that doesn't make it into a table but tells you something about how she thinks about her own preferences and how openly she's willing to discuss them. What her life looks like outside the work is largely unrecorded. She has an OnlyFans presence that presumably gives the closest view available, but the Detroit chapter — what she was doing before, what that city meant — remains mostly untold.
The Ten
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