Famous beauties, who appear in well known TV and films, are cashing in from “turning tricks” says Alisa “Bunnie Xo” DeFord – who was a high profile escort, prostitute and stripper
World Cup footie fans have been told to be careful about scoring off the pitch – because some celebrity actresses are actually secret hookers. Well known Hollywood actresses are working as prostitutes to supplement their income, an American podcaster has sensationally claimed.
Famous beauties, who appear in well known TV and films, are cashing in from “turning tricks” says Alisa “Bunnie Xo” DeFord – who was a high profile escort, prostitute and stripper.
Bunnie is aware of performers, who serve up their body for thousands of dollars, rather than be looking for true love. Many famous females, based in US cities where England fans will gather for the big games, can be contacted directly through their social media and OnlyFans pages.
The 46-year-old says that hooking up with famous male Tinseltown stars is not good for business because they don’t want to pay full amounts.
Asked whether rumours of females known on TV and in the movies supplement their incomes as prostitutes are true, she replied: “Yes, it is. A lot of those girls are working girls and a lot of the guys are paying for it – a lot of movie execs. A lot of Hollywood in general. It’s a windy, twisty road for sure.
“Money is the root of all evil. So people sell their souls for it all the time. We all sell pieces of ourselves in a way, “I really try not to glamorize it. My story is completely different than some girls who have been in sex work. I had crazy things happen to me when I was in sex work, but for the most part I told myself that I was doing it to take my power back from all the power that was taken from me as a child.
“In reality, that’s not what I was doing. I was just living again in survival mode and feeding my addiction, but also just not walking a path that I would ever want a little girl listening to my story or reading my book to walk. I want them to learn from me like, Hey man, it worked out for me because I was so tenacious, but a lot of girls don’t. It’s a dead end road. A lot of girls don’t get out like I did.”
The podcaster and mental health advocate herself admitted that male screen stars were bad for business.
“I used to try to stay away from them. We used to call them star f****** and I never wanted to be a star f*****. And also a lot of people that were in Hollywood, especially big actors and stuff like that, they didn’t want to spend a lot of money.
“They figured because they had the name, they didn’t spend money. So I always went for the guys that were behind the scenes, the oil tycoons, the guys that weren’t in Hollywood, and the ones that were running the show behind the scenes.”
Asked why celebrity men employ hookers, she reacted: ” Because it’s a business transaction. You’re paying that girl to leave. And I feel like a lot of people think that there’s emotions involved and it’s you’re literally making a deal with somebody and you’re saying, okay, I’m paying you to get out of here and leave me alone and never come back.
“Whereas out in the square world, they would have to wine and dine and take them on dates and get to know you get that emotional attachment. And a lot of people don’t want that emotional attachment. They just want to get it up, get it in, get it on and get it out.”
Bunnie claims that some executives believed that the movie Pretty Woman could happen in real life. “I had a lot of sugar daddies that would try to get me to marry them, and I couldn’t do it. I always separated business from pleasure. Obviously I have a thing for tattooed felons. Drug dealers is my thing. I just always kind of lived a double life. It would be: go to work, make my money, come home, take the mask off and be a girlfriend or a wife to whoever it was that I was with at the time.
“A lot of men have mommy issues and they want some sort of mother figure wife figure in their, A lot of men have control issues, so they love controlling you with money. Something happened to them in their childhood that they just can’t make that connection with somebody in the real world So it’s like they fall in love with the fantasy.”