The internet’s relationship with former OnlyFans star Bonnie Blue (real name Tia Billinger) just keeps getting messier — and that’s saying something given her documented history of controversy. Her latest chapter involves a pregnancy claim that’s been about as stable as a house of cards in a windstorm.
Blue first announced she was pregnant in February, weeks after completing what she called a“breeding mission”involving unprotected sex with 400 men. She posted a YouTube video where she described classic pregnancy symptoms — nausea, migraines, food aversions — and showed an at-home pregnancy test on camera that she interpreted as positive. An alleged ultrasound followed, complete with her asking“Oh, is that the baby?”to a grainy image. So far, so plausible for anyone unfamiliar with Blue’s track record.
But here’s where things get weird. By March, Blue had done a complete 180. In a video filmed outside a villa in Mexico, she cradled a silicone bump and admitted the entire thing was a stunt.“I’m no longer gonna need this fake bump,”she said, per the Mirror, before crediting“all you middle-aged dumb parents that fell for my rage bait”for generating over 100 million views and £1 million in earnings. It was the ultimate gotcha moment — or so we thought.
Then May rolled around. Blue was spotted partying in Ayia Napa and released a press statement claiming she’s actually pregnant this time.“I told you I was pregnant, it’s not my fault you’re dumb,”she said. At this point, skepticism isn’t just warranted; it’s basically the only reasonable response. She’d already pulled this exact card once before.
What makes this cycle particularly notable is the context Blue herself provided. One year before the February pregnancy claim, she’d told Us Weekly that she’d struggled with fertility in the past and had needed to pursue IVF with a previous partner.“I tried to get pregnant for years with my ex-partner and really, really struggled and I’d have to go down the IVF route,”she explained at the time, adding that she wasn’t in a position to get pregnant naturally. That statement makes the February announcement, the March confession, and the May reversal even more head-spinning.
Blue has also defended her actions by attacking critics who experienced miscarriages, saying in a press release that her pregnancy announcement didn’t mock their loss. She insisted it was her body and her choice how to share the news. Fair enough on bodily autonomy — but when you’ve already admitted to using pregnancy as clickbait content once, expect people to tune out the next claim. Trust, once demolished this spectacularly, doesn’t rebuild on demand.

About the Author
Ava Hart
Ava Hart is a contributor to LocalBeat, covering local news and community stories.





