Child social media star Lil Tay turned 18, and within hours, she launched an OnlyFans account and claimed to have broken records. Now her father, Christopher Hope, is speaking out — telling TMZ Tuesday he won’t be monitoring her content and that she’s free to make her own decisions. But across social media, the response has been anything but celebratory.
Some critics are demanding legal accountability for her subscribers, accusing them of waiting for a child star to turn legal. One comment on her Instagram reads, “Anyone who subscribes is a PDF [pedophile].” Another says, “If you’re actually dropping adult content and not a new song, you’re weird… I feel like that’s not ok.”
Record-breaking debut on OnlyFans
Tay Tian, known online as Lil Tay, promoted her new content by posting on Instagram, writing, “All content shot @ 12:01AM on my 18th birthday.”
Her bio now reads “Just turned 18,” while her link is promoted with the tagline “Youngest girl on OnlyFans.” Within three hours, she posted a screenshot claiming she had earned more than $1 million on the platform.
That number would break Bhad Bhabie’s previous record of earning $1 million in six hours when she joined the platform at age 18 in 2021.
Even Bhad Bhabie, who faced similar backlash at the time, appeared in a podcast episode in 2022, agreeing that people who subscribed right away “should be in jail.”
The subscription-based social media platform is known for sexually explicit content, while some creators post exclusive types of content like workouts or art.
Lil Tay’s complicated past
Lil Tay rose to fame in 2018 as a self-proclaimed “flexer,” going viral for profanity-laced videos bragging about wealth. She claimed to be nine years old at the time.
In 2021, her Instagram account was used to accuse her father of mental and physical abuse. She also claimed he had stolen her money. Around the same time, her half-brother launched a GoFundMe page asking for $150,000 to help their mother, Angela Tian, regain full custody.
She was allegedly in the middle of a custody dispute between her parents, which made headlines after years of inactivity online.
Former manager Diomi Cordero said, per Business Insider, “Her brother was the creator of the [Lil Tay] character when they first started. He just lost control of it. Before he left, he told a bunch of us that he was going to accuse her dad of sexually abusing her as a way to win the case in the court.”
When Business Insider reached out to Hope for comment on alleged exploitation, he didn’t answer directly — instead, he sent a link to that interview.
In 2023, things escalated further when Lil Tay’s official Instagram account suddenly posted a message announcing her death, along with her half-brother’s.
Death hoax and family fallout
The post was widely believed to be real — even Variety confirmed her death with her management team. But just one day later, the family released a statement to TMZ saying she was alive.
Lil Tay herself responded in a statement:
“I want to make it clear that my brother and I are safe and alive, but I’m completely heartbroken, and struggling to even find the right words to say. It’s been a very traumatizing 24 hours. All day yesterday, I was bombarded with endless heartbreaking and tearful phone calls from loved ones all while trying to sort out this mess.”
She continued, “My Instagram account was compromised by a 3rd party and used to spread jarring misinformation and rumors regarding me, to the point that even my name was wrong. My legal name is Tay Tian, not ‘Claire Hope.’”
Just a month later, she released a music video for a new song titled “SUCKER 4 GREEN.”
Is this another performance?
Since launching her OnlyFans, Tay and her half-brother have been posting back-and-forth videos that some viewers believe are part of a scripted skit. The back-and-forth has left many wondering whether her latest moves are genuine or calculated due to the “bad acting.”
OnlyFans has clear rules: both creators and subscribers must be 18 or older. Content must not feature anyone under that age. From a legal standpoint, Lil Tay’s launch meets the requirements.
But for many, that’s not the issue. The backlash isn’t just about what she posted; it’s about how the internet has watched her grow up and what it means when that audience suddenly becomes paying subscribers as soon as she turns 18.
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Author: Kennedy Felton
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