Another Gay Olympian Is On OnlyFans...Gurl!
There used to be some stigma about being on OnlyFans. Before COVID, some gays would roll their eyes and judge the other gays for being the platform. COVID changed all of that. The ability to make money from home using your natural "talents" has now become a major way many from the community can pay their bills. What's so bad about that? Even the gays rolling their eyes were still peeking. Last week, we talked about the British Olympic swim team jumping on the OnlyFans bandwagon. Well, Olympian rower and out athlete Robbie Manson is showing his stuff on the platform as well.
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He has been very open about his OnlyFans presence and said he was inspired to join the site by fellow queer athlete, Australia's Matthew Mitchum. Damn, we'd love to see a collab.
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Robbie has also shared that he is making more money from OnlyFans than from his rowing career.
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The Paris Olympics is Robbie's third Games appearance, having taken part in the London and Rio Games. He was burned out by 15 hard years of rowing and took some time off to reevaluate life and explore other career avenues. OnlyFans came in around that time.
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He maintains that his OnlyFans is in line with his brand. There is no explicit content or collabs, but he does share artistic nudes to celebrate body positivity and expression. Over the years, he is no stranger to posting thirst traps, tastefully done, that have kept us drooling for a long time.
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Robbie has shared that he started realizing his sexual identity at age 19, but stayed in the closet out of fear. He wasn't even honest with himself. His older brother came out and inspired Robbie to do the same. By the end of the London Olympics, his family and his team knew he was gay. He says everyone's response was supportive and positive. He told Outsports:
I feel like my perspective has changed so much and now I'm not only proud to be gay, but I'm glad that I am. I wouldn't want to be any other way. I think it makes me more interesting, and it's something that does make me different in a good way. I learned that I'm a lot stronger and more resilient than I gave myself credit for, and that other people are far more accepting than I thought they would be.
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