The internet has a way of monetizing the most niche interests imaginable—and OnlyFans creator Amira Evans is proving just how lucrative some of those niches can be.
The 26-year-old British creator revealed she’s pulling in $100 per minute for what’s known as“giantess”content: custom videos that play into a fascination with size disparity, power dynamics, and domination. At 6 foot, 7 inches tall, Evans has built an entire revenue stream around requests that tap into a very specific fantasy. Men pay her to film scenarios where she towers over them—literally and figuratively. According to Evans, subscribers ask for everything from her stepping on dolls to placing them inside her socks and standing on them. Others request she pick them up, sit on them, or just squish them like a bug. The power dynamic is the whole appeal: tiny, pathetic, and utterly at her mercy.
You might assume this is some fringe fetish, but Evans insists it’s far more common than people realize. Her subscribers pay her specifically to make them feel small in comparison, and she uses clever camera work to amplify the effect—her assistant films from floor level with a wide lens to exaggerate the length of her legs and the size of her feet. It’s filmmaking meets fantasy, and it’s working.
The timing of Evans’revelation is interesting.“Giantess”content has been creeping into the mainstream lately, most notably through HBO Max’s Euphoria, where Cassie (Sydney Sweeney) becomes an OnlyFans-like star who caters to subscribers with giantess fantasies. One particularly controversial scene shows an oversized Cassie pressing her giant breasts against office building windows while a man inside masturbates to one of her videos. The show bringing this fetish to millions of viewers has only amplified curiosity—and likely driven more traffic toward creators like Evans.
What Evans’numbers reveal is something broader about the creator economy: there’s serious money in almost any niche if you can find an audience willing to pay for it. Whether that’s $100 per minute for giantess content or anything else, the platform allows creators to monetize desires that might have remained hidden in a pre-internet world. The question isn’t whether these niches exist—clearly they do—but what the normalizing of such content through mainstream TV shows means for how we talk about sex work, fantasy, and power dynamics online.
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Local Lawton
Local Lawton is a contributor to LocalBeat, covering local news and community stories.