There’s timing, and then there’s symbolic timing. OnlyFans creator Lena Nersesian—known as Lena the Plug—filed for divorce on June 1, 2026, the exact same day she turned 35. It wasn’t just a coincidental date; it was a statement.
In her Instagram post that morning, she reflected on the milestone with the kind of clarity that comes from hard-won self-knowledge. A few years earlier, she’d dreaded hitting 30, convinced it meant decline. Instead, she wrote, her 30s had taught her the opposite: life keeps getting better. She’d learned more about herself, built something to be proud of, and found contentment she didn’t think was possible. Now, at 35, she was stepping into the next chapter—alone.
The split from Adam Grandmaison, known online as Adam22 and a podcaster and YouTuber, came quietly. Court documents show the couple’s official separation date was April 15, 2026, meaning they’d parted ways nearly two months before Lena made it official. The pair had been together since 2016, started creating adult content together in 2017, and married in May 2023 after nearly seven years together. Their daughter, Parker, was born in November 2020.
The divorce filings lay out the financial details of their lives built together. Lena is requesting roughly $730,000 in assets, including half of a $1.152 million entertainment studio, $50,000 from a $100,000 savings account, and an equal split of their two podcasts,“No Jumper”and“Plug Talk.”She’s also asking for custody of Parker and monthly spousal support of $3,000. In her filing, she claimed to have no job and no access to financial resources—a detail that underscores the dependency that can develop even in high-profile creative partnerships.
Adam’s response, meanwhile, felt designed for the internet he built his brand on. Just two days after the filing, he posted“Freedom”on Instagram Stories set to Jay-Z’s“Girls Girls Girls”and then followed up with a provocative invitation to women interested in dating him, adding he’d buy them a car. The tone was deliberately flippant, treating a three-year marriage’s end like a joke—which either spoke to how he really felt or how he wanted the world to think he felt.
What stands out isn’t just the divorce itself, but the contrast between their public presentations of it. Lena used the moment to claim growth and self-discovery; Adam used it to broadcast availability. One spoke to intention and closure; the other to deflection and performance. That gap says as much about their partnership as any court document ever could.
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Local Lawton
Local Lawton is a contributor to LocalBeat, covering local news and community stories.