Inside the Bop House Dynasty

CREATOR NEWSLETTER


On December 9th, OnlyFans stars Sophie Rain and Aishah Sofey posted a video in front of a sprawling Florida mansion. “You can’t just make a house of bops,” the caption read. Seconds later, they reveal a large canvas with the Bop House logo. The video quickly amassed over 10 million views, and the Bop House was born.

The Bop House is a content house comprising seven OnlyFans stars with over 34 million collective followers. They create safe-for-work content on TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube that leans heavily into viral trends and popular audios.

The women are all aged 19 to 24, and they’ve received outside attention for the obscene amount of money they claim to generate per year on OnlyFans. Sophie Rain, the highest earner of the house, says she earned $43 million last year, while other girls claim to be raking in millions per month.

Content houses are not a new phenomenon. The first content house, The Station, was established by a group of YouTubers in Venice Beach, California, in 2009. Since then, hundreds of content houses have cropped up across the country, often tied to the rise of specific platforms.

There were YouTuber houses. An apartment complex full of Vine stars. Homes full of Musical.ly kids, Snapchat stars, Twitch streamers, and gaming creators.

As each new social platform goes mainstream, it births a slew of content houses. When TikTok use exploded in 2019, a group of Gen Z creators launched the Hype House, which became a household name overnight to millions of teens.

The Bop House launch had a similar effect. It is the first consumer-facing content house for the OnlyFans era and represents a breakthrough moment for the platform in culture. The Bop House and its creators have put OnlyFans on the map to a new generation of internet users who see it as just another social platform, especially women. 

While the Bop House’s fandom initially started as nearly entirely men, its TikTok following now consists of up to 70% young women. Many of these women have developed deep parasocial bonds to the Bop House creators through their intricate storylines and manufactured controversies.

“These OnlyFans creators have really figured out how to make [safe for work] social media content that promotes OnlyFans,” said Jack Appleby, a brand strategist and writer of Future Social, a newsletter on social media and creator strategy. “They’re becoming more viral on every other platform and their OFs are growing by the nature of that… it’s exponential growth.”

Adry Gonzales, a social media strategist in Miami, said that she followed the Bop House launch closely because it made such a splash online.

“The Bop House,” she said, “they’re young, they’re pretty, they’re rich, they post fantastic content. They set the standard. They’re cute as hell, they have beefs. They’re not your typical sex workers, with everyone’s biases, that’s what makes them captivating, they’re charismatic and funny.”

Like the Hype House, there are already breakout stars of the group. Rain, Sofey, and a creator named Camilla Araújo garner the most attention. Araújo has collaborated with A-list YouTubers, including Tana Mongeau and James Charles.

She recently launched a podcast where she interviews viral internet figures like Ash Trevino. Trevino is a TikToker known for dating inmates and dubbed “worst mom on TikTok” for the things she exposes her children to. She and her daughter visited the Bop House in February.


PERSONALITIES

Decoding the Dead-Eyed Gaze of Ashton Hall’s Morning Routine

Decoding the Dead-Eyed Gaze of Ashton Hall’s Morning Routine

Looking for a side hustle?

Working from home can make it a lot easier to find time to make stuff, and Virtual Vocations can show you how and where to get started. Check out their virtual career resource guides and get to work (at home).


IN THE BIZ


PLATFORMS

Will We Get A TikTok Deal In Time?

Trump issued another update on the lingering TikTok deal.

By Charlotte Colombo, Passionfruit Contributor

TikTok deal - Photo Illustration of Trump in front of a large April 2025 wall calendar with the 5th circled multiple times in red link and a Tiktok sticker overlayed.

PLATFORMS

Photo illustration of three hands holding phones on Substack; Center: A phone with a Tiktok-like feed with the Subtack Logos.

Substack Launches TikTok-Style Feed

The newsletter platform continues to look to TikTok for inspiration.

By Charlotte Colombo, Passionfruit Contributor


JOB BOARD


WHAT WE’RE WATCHING

Content for Creators.

News, tips, and tricks delivered to your inbox twice a week.

Newsletter Signup

Latest Newsletters

  • SAG Bears the Mark of the (Mr)Beast

    SAG Bears the Mark of the (Mr)Beast

    CREATOR NEWSLETTER Issue #156 | August 3, 2023 It’s not been a great week to be the world’s most popular YouTuber, Jimmy Donaldson, aka MrBeast aka probably not the antichrist, who may or may not also be a scab?  I mean sure, I MAY be inclined to think the worst on hearing that there are…

  • BookTok’s Hockey Smut Sexualization Problem

    BookTok’s Hockey Smut Sexualization Problem

    CREATOR NEWSLETTER Issue #156 | August 1, 2023 Ah, BookTok. A place heralded as a safe haven for young female readers—both feminist and not-so-feminist. It’s a place for some to connect over the revolutionary musings of Bell Hooks and Audre Lorde. A place to be a self-aware Sally Rooney sad girl, an unhinged satirical “My…

  • What Makes a Career Content Creator?

    What Makes a Career Content Creator?

    CREATOR NEWSLETTER Issue #155 | July 27, 2023 Words mean something. It’s important to define your terminology—especially now, during Hot Labor Summer, with SAG, the WGA, and several non-Hollywood-based unions on strike.  Unfortunately, in the case of SAG in particular, a lot of the terminology has gotten quite muddled, sometimes leading to conflicting responses. If…