
Bonnie Blue has opened up about what her family really think about her controversial adult film career.
The porn star, originally from Nottingham, became hugely popular on OnlyFans after performing a number of questionable sex stunts, including the time she slept with 1,000 'barely legal' men in 12 hours.
Recently, the platform banned the 26-year-old after she was planning a 2,000-person 'petting zoo' event in London because 'extreme challenge content is not available on OnlyFans'.
"I’m gonna be hitting 2,000 bodies and I’m not gonna be the only girl there," Bonnie said.
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Now, a new Channel 4 documentary titled 1000 Men and Me: The Bonnie Blue Story has provided an insight into what she's really like, how she met her estranged husband and what her parents think of her line of work.

Throughout the doc, Bonnie - whose real name is Tia Billinger - insists that her family are really supportive of her career choice.
“Would it be something that I chose for her to do, no,” her mum admitted.
“I was really really shocked, but now would I want her doing anything else?
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“No, not at all. All you want is for your kids to be happy and she is happy.”
Although Bonnie's claimed to have made millions from her adult films, her mother insists that it hasn't come without criticism and 'nasty comments'.
“People now think it’s okay to [say] nasty comments and most of the time I just laugh, because if you could earn £1 million in a month your morals would soon change and you’d get your bits out,” she said.

Viewers also learned that Bonnie is paying for her whole family so they can give up their day jobs.
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Despite the generous gesture, people at home have needed to adjust to her unconventional career, particularly when she's filming in the next room.
“My mum said, every time I come in this house it’s just dildos everywhere,” she said.
“It was funny because for New Year’s Eve, my family came over and I was in the living room filming. They all had to be really really quiet and they were like, 'When can I put the music on?'
“And I was in the living room just f**king myself and they had to wait in silence next door.”
Despite receiving a lot of backlash amid the underage porn ban, Channel 4 defended its decision to share explicit content on TV.
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“The explicit content in the documentary is editorially justified and provides essential context; making pornographic content is Bonnie’s job, and this film is about her work and the response to it,” the broadcaster said in a statement to LADbible.
Topics: Bonnie Blue, Adult Industry, TV and Film