Ooh I definitely want some unfiltered criticism! Here’s a snippet from the opening scene of a draft I’m working on for Yay Team 2025.
The main character is a grizzled, older Olympic diver who has to turn to OnlyFans in order to pay for his training. Lmk what you think!
———————
Not for the first time that day, I was contemplating manslaughter.
I stood in Cameron’s small studio like a right muppet—bare chest out, jeans slung low, trying not to look like I’d wandered onto the set of a dodgy calendar shoot. Cameron was doing his thing with the lens, head tilted, fingers fiddling with some little dial like it mattered.
I hated this. Not in the I feel silly way. No—this was proper, bone-deep hate. I hated the lighting, too soft and too warm. I hated how the denim stuck to my thighs. Hated the way I felt like a preened boytoy, posing for the camera like a cheap tart in a Topman ad.
Cameron sighed, finally lifting his head. “Could you, I don’t know… smile a little?”
Christ, it got on my nerves how he pronounced every syllable down to a tee. He sounded like a posh grammar school wanker who’d drank too much chamomile tea.
“You’ve got that look like you’re about to chew someone’s ear off,” he continued.
“Maybe I am,” I muttered. “No promises.” He sighed again, letting it drop, thin lips pressed to a line.
OnlyFans hadn’t been my first idea. It hadn’t been my tenth, either. It hadn’t been on the list at all, until some friend-of-a-friend had mentioned how their younger sister was raking in ten thousand quid a month. All for a few bloody feet pics a day.
Christ knew I could use that kind of cash flow. At thirty-four, I wasn’t pulling sponsors like I used to. For a while I’d scraped by on contract renewals and old royalties—until some fresh-faced lad with abs like smooth marble came along and smiled for the cameras.
That was it for me. Chucked aside like expired milk.
With no marketable skills to speak of, all I had to offer was the body I spent honing six days a week until it rippled and bulged like a Greek god. I looked bloody good and I damn well knew it. I’d found myself thinking—it wouldn’t be so bad. I’d modelled before. And a photo was what it was, didn’t matter if you were selling to Calvin Klein or… others.
But now, standing before the camera, I found the notion unbearable. Like I was nothing more than sleazy tabloid fodder.
The main character is a grizzled, older Olympic diver who has to turn to OnlyFans in order to pay for his training. Lmk what you think!
———————
Not for the first time that day, I was contemplating manslaughter.
I stood in Cameron’s small studio like a right muppet—bare chest out, jeans slung low, trying not to look like I’d wandered onto the set of a dodgy calendar shoot. Cameron was doing his thing with the lens, head tilted, fingers fiddling with some little dial like it mattered.
I hated this. Not in the I feel silly way. No—this was proper, bone-deep hate. I hated the lighting, too soft and too warm. I hated how the denim stuck to my thighs. Hated the way I felt like a preened boytoy, posing for the camera like a cheap tart in a Topman ad.
Cameron sighed, finally lifting his head. “Could you, I don’t know… smile a little?”
Christ, it got on my nerves how he pronounced every syllable down to a tee. He sounded like a posh grammar school wanker who’d drank too much chamomile tea.
“You’ve got that look like you’re about to chew someone’s ear off,” he continued.
“Maybe I am,” I muttered. “No promises.” He sighed again, letting it drop, thin lips pressed to a line.
OnlyFans hadn’t been my first idea. It hadn’t been my tenth, either. It hadn’t been on the list at all, until some friend-of-a-friend had mentioned how their younger sister was raking in ten thousand quid a month. All for a few bloody feet pics a day.
Christ knew I could use that kind of cash flow. At thirty-four, I wasn’t pulling sponsors like I used to. For a while I’d scraped by on contract renewals and old royalties—until some fresh-faced lad with abs like smooth marble came along and smiled for the cameras.
That was it for me. Chucked aside like expired milk.
With no marketable skills to speak of, all I had to offer was the body I spent honing six days a week until it rippled and bulged like a Greek god. I looked bloody good and I damn well knew it. I’d found myself thinking—it wouldn’t be so bad. I’d modelled before. And a photo was what it was, didn’t matter if you were selling to Calvin Klein or… others.
But now, standing before the camera, I found the notion unbearable. Like I was nothing more than sleazy tabloid fodder.