Bonnie Blue’s ‘1,000 Men and Me’ Doc Sparked Major Backla…

Channel 4 didn’t just air a documentary. They struck a match and dropped it straight into a pile of political kindling. Now, the British free-to-view station is under serious fire for 1,000 Men and Me: The Bonnie Blue Story, a one-hour film that follows adult performer Tia Billinger, known as Bonnie Blue, as she prepares for and executes sex with 1,057 men in 12 hours.
The doc premiered Wednesday, July 30, just days after the UK’s new Online Safety Act went into effect—a law that tightened age checks across all major porn sites. So, the timing? Not ideal.
Viewers were hit with graphic footage of Billinger, 26, filming sex scenes, appearing nude, and prepping for her headline-grabbing stunt with “1,600 condoms, 50 balaclavas, [and] numbing lube.” Some called it “disturbing,” “sickening,” and straight-up “literal porn.”
A Channel 4 spokesperson defended the decision to air the doc, saying: “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.”
But that hasn’t stopped the fallout.
Children’s Commissioner for England Dame Rachel de Souza warned that the film “risks taking us a step back” by glamorizing content that young people already find “frightening.” She said Billinger’s work “showcases violence against women as entertainment” and allows sexist ideas to go unchecked.
And the backlash didn’t stop there. After reviewing the content, advertisers including Visa and Smirnoff reportedly pulled their ads from streaming of the film. Meanwhile, Conservative peer Gabby Bertin—who chairs the government’s independent pornography taskforce—announced plans to propose a new ban on “barely legal” porn later this year.
“We will be trying to address the ‘barely legal’ aspect legislatively,” Bertin told The Guardian, pointing to a scene in which Billinger films with men in school uniforms.
Billinger—who was banned from OnlyFans after announcing her planned “petting zoo” stunt, which violated the platform’s policy against “extreme challenges”—has yet to publicly address the backlash facing Channel 4.