Bonnie Blue has confirmed that the pregnancy she spent weeks teasing online was never real. After months of speculation, the adult content creator revealed that the growing bump she had displayed on social media was fake and part of a strategy to draw attention.
In a video posted Tuesday, March 31, Bonnie Blue—whose real name is Tia Billinger—appeared outside a villa in Mexico and pulled back her shirt to reveal what she described as a silicone stomach. She said the fake pregnancy had helped fuel massive engagement during spring break.
“So, spring break is done, and I’m no longer gonna need this fake bump,” Blue said in the clip, according to Us Weekly. “Thank you for all you middle-aged dumb parents that fell for my rage bait, because not only has it paid for the villa [and] the sunshine, but over 100 million views has made me £1 million better off.”
The admission marks a sharp reversal from what Bonnie Blue had been saying for weeks. In February, she claimed she was pregnant after participating in what she called a “breeding mission,” a controversial event in which she said she had unprotected sex with 400 men.
The stunt came after she postponed the original January date because, as she put it at the time, “the timing needs to be perfect.”
When the event finally moved forward on February 7, Blue later posted a video insisting that she was “definitely pregnant” and trying to figure out what to do next. The claim sparked widespread online conversation and even prompted questions from some of the men who said they had participated.
One of them was adult film performer Jak White, who said he had been among the 400 men involved. After Blue first announced the pregnancy, White admitted he had wondered whether he could be the father.
“Like, ‘God, she’s actually got pregnant from it. Is it mine? Could it be mine? I don’t know,’” White said at the time.
Even as rumors began to circulate that Blue’s pregnancy might not be real, she publicly pushed back. Earlier this month, after being photographed with what some followers believed looked like a silicone bump, Blue denied that anything unusual was going on.
“I would just say women’s bodies come in all different shapes and sizes, and it’s as simple as that,” she said in response to questions about the rumors.
She also leaned into the speculation during a previous interview, arguing that disbelief only made the story bigger.
“It’s not my job to convince them I am actually pregnant,” Blue said. “The more doubts, the more comments, the more views.”