Dan Dangler Slams OnlyFans Star Annie Knight’s $7K Dating App: 'Stop Scamming Fans'

Dan Dangler has blasted Annie Knight’s $7K dating app, calling it a scam, saying, "She has a fiancé. You’re paying to date someone already taken."

Dan Dangler has slammed OnlyFans Star Annie Knight.
Dan Dangler has slammed OnlyFans Star Annie Knight.
Getty

OnlyFans star Dan Dangler is calling out fellow adult content star Annie Knight over her controversial new dating offer, accusing her of misleading fans by charging thousands for one-on-one meetups despite being engaged.

Knight, who rose to fame after alleging she slept with 583 men during a PR stunt, recently launched a new paid dating application. Prices start at nearly $1,200 and go as high as $6,900 for an hour-long date.

"It’s like a good deed," Knight told US Weekly.

"Maybe they’ve been a fan of me for a long time and they’ve always wanted the opportunity to take me out, this is their chance. It really goes back to giving back to my supporters, my subscribers, my fans."

But Dangler, who say she has knows Knight personally, offered her blunt opinion.

"I’m no moral compass," Dangler said. "But I will say, what this girl is doing is so fucked up, because I know her personally, and I know that she has a fiancé."

Dangler alleged that fans would be paying thousands under false pretenses.

"You’re gonna be paying $7,000 to take this chick out, and then she’s gonna give you tips on how to woo chicks or something?" Dangler said.

"You can’t just talk to her on her OnlyFans and figure that out for 40 bucks or something? She’s trying to scam you. She has a husband."

Knight, who got engaged to Henry Brayshaw in 2025, defended the move by noting the application requires participants to fill out detailed forms about themselves and includes no physical contact.

She clarified the service is about conversation and helping men gain dating confidence.

"These services do not include intercourse or anything physical," she wrote in the application, explaining that the price tag was meant to filter inquiries after receiving over 22,000 submissions in a previous campaign.

Knight maintained that the response has been "really good," saying the goal was to avoid being overwhelmed and to deliver meaningful experiences to a smaller group.

Dangler, however, remained critical of the concept.

"Like, she's trying to scam you, she has a husband.," he repeated. "That’s f**ked up."

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