
She spent well over a decade in front of the camera, which already puts her in a category most performers never reach, but what's more interesting is what she chose to do with the credibility that longevity bought her. Rather than a quiet exit, she gave the kind of interview — the Fleshbot one in particular — where she clearly wasn't performing. She talked about sexuality as education, about what the industry actually looks like from inside, and about the gap between how the public imagines the work and how it functions in practice. None of it read like damage control. Then, instead of retiring, she started renaming herself. The shift from Vandella to Moon isn't cosmetic. She has framed it publicly as a move toward autonomy and sustainability — her words, not a publicist's. She still has an OnlyFans. She is still working, just differently. Whether Moon becomes a distinct persona or a genuine reinvention is a question she hasn't fully answered yet, and she seems comfortable leaving it open.
The Ten
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