Bonnie Blue has shared an X-rated message with the Balinese press pack just minutes before she was deported from the Indonesian holiday island, telling cameramen: ‘Usually I have other things in my face’.
Blue – whose real name is Tia Billinger – was arrested by Bali police allegedly playing a ‘sex game’ at a Schoolies event in Badung last week with more than a dozen men.
It’s understood the 26-year-old was arrested on suspicion of allegedly making pornographic material, which is illegal under Indonesia‘s strict morality laws, before being allowed to return to her accommodation pending the investigation.
On Friday, Blue and her crew of three men – including crass Australian comedian Julian Woods – were hounded by reporters on their way to Denpasar District Court.
The sex worker gave a taught smile and greeted reporters with a ‘Hi boys’ as cameras and microphones were thrust in her face.
‘Usually it’s other things in my face’ she quipped, though her tone failed to hit the usual levity she is known for when making provocative comments.
The male members of the media seemed to enjoy following her, with laughter as she smiled and one reporter heard yelling ‘I love you Bonnie’.
Asked if she was nervous facing trial, Blue said: ‘Never.’
Bonnie Blue will be deported from Bali on Friday night
Blue is due to be deported on Friday night after a court issued her a fine over her ‘Bang Bus’ which she had used as a publicity stunt.
She must pay a fine of IDR 200,000 (AU $18.03).
Immigration officials told the Daily Mail she will be banned from returning to Bali for ‘at least ten years’.
Walking into court on Friday, Blue was composed, wearing a cream top, dark trousers and a dainty gold watch.
The only time she seemed to break from her smiling was when a female journalist asked if it is ‘ok’ for her to be banned from Indonesia for 10 years.
‘Oh, I didn’t know we had a mind reader in the room,’ Blue replied, less than amused.
Asked again, Blue then bizarrely said: ‘Where am I gonna get my hot dogs from?’
However, it was mainly Woods – who describes himself as ‘Australia’s number one biological male’ – who attempted to crack jokes on the way to and inside court.
When Blue was asked whether she organised someone to pick up Schoolies boys in her ‘little pickup truck’ – which she has named her ‘Bangbus’, Woods jumped in.
‘No, we got steak last night… Like a wagyu,’ he said.
Blue, straight-faced, added: ‘A really big bit of meat that was. A really big, thick chunk.’
Woods went on to describe the rib-eye, pepper sauce and potatoes they had dined on, but whatever humour he was trying to convey fell flat with Balinese reporters.
‘You no funny,’ one said, while another said: ‘I don’t understand.’
Woods then pulled faces at reporters while they waited for the trial to begin. The other two men with Blue, both British, said nothing.
On Thursday, Badung Police and immigration officials in Jimbaran said Billinger’s whole trip was simply an elaborate publicity stunt.
‘They have misused the visa they have to make content in Bali,’ Immigration chief Heru Winarko said.