Today, Explained - Quitting OnlyFans
Episode Date: April 3, 2026With the death of its billionaire owner, OnlyFans is having a bit of an existential crisis all while porn-quitting apps have never been more popular. This episode was produced by Dustin DeSoto, edite...d by Amina Al-Sadi, fact-checked by Andrea Lopez-Cruzado, engineered by Patrick Boyd and David Tatasciore, and hosted by Sean Rameswaram. A screenshot from the website Quittr, which helps men struggling with porn addiction. Listen to Today, Explained ad-free by becoming a Vox Member: vox.com/members. New Vox members get $20 off their membership right now. Transcript at vox.com/today-explained-podcast. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
You've probably never heard of Leonid Radvinsky, but you've probably heard of his website.
It's called OnlyFans.
In case you've been living under an ascetic rock for the last six or seven years,
OnlyFans is the biggest hub of amateur pornography on the internet.
And Leonid Radvinsky was maybe the most successful pornographer in the history of the human race
until he died of cancer maybe a week ago at the age of 43.
We don't exactly know when or where he died because Leonid was a super private person.
Kind of ironic because he made billions of dollars off a website that encouraged people to bear it all for the entire world to see.
Leonid took a 20% cut and the creators got 80.
Some say only fans revolutionized sex work, made the world's oldest profession safer, easier.
Others called Redvinsky the world's most successful pimp.
But now that he's dead, his game-changing website is at a bit of an existential crossroads,
and we're going to take you there on Today Explained.
In communities across Canada, hourly Amazon employees can grow their skills and their paycheck by enrolling in free skills training programs for in-demand fields.
Learn more at aboutamazon.ca.
Where does President Trump's speech leave us with regard to where the war is heading?
And it really was, to me, the story of the commander-in-chief who weeks into this war is deeply uncertain about how it ends.
I'm John Feiner.
co-host of the Long Game podcast.
This week, Jake Sullivan and I break down the president's speech
and discuss what it's like to negotiate with the Iranians.
We will also debate whether Iran should accept a deal.
The episode is out now.
Search and follow The Long Game, wherever you get your podcasts.
Today, today explains.
My name's Amelia Gentleman.
I'm a reporter with the Guardian newspaper.
And this gentleman has been writing
a lot about porn lately. So we asked her to tell us about this secretive figure, the late
Leonid Radvinsky. So what we do know about him is he was born in Ukraine. He was born in Soviet
Ukraine in Odessa. He moved with his family to the US when he was about six. He was a very good
student, was very good at playing chess, went to Northwestern University and studied economics.
and graduated in the top of his class.
But even as a teenager, even before he graduated,
he had somehow understood that there was money to be made in pornography
or in adult content websites.
And as a teenager, he set up his first website called Cybertania,
which was quite grim in that it sold passwords to internet users
that purported to allow them access to very, very explicit content,
often promising to give access to bestiality and child sex abuse material.
Yikes.
It's uncertain whether or not that content,
whether or not the passwords actually allowed users access.
But anyway, that was what the business model was.
And you're saying he was able to do this as a minor?
How?
He asked his mother to be director of the company.
So he was very precocious in the pornography sphere.
It's a tiny point, but I suppose he would have said it was a significant point.
There is a question mark about whether or not he did actually grant people access to that illegal content.
The website promised to, but it may not actually have worked.
So to some extent or another, it was a scam in the adult industry adjacent web area.
So how does he go from a minor scammer to a major player in internet pornography?
So after university, he continued to be in the adult industry.
I believe he set up a webcam company allowing users to see women.
via live streams. He also set up an investment fund. He was based in Florida and the little that we do
know about him comes from a web page that he had where he talked only about his investment fund
and not about pornography. But the critical moment in his life came, I think, in 2018,
where he became aware of a British company called Onlyfans set up by a.
a family of British people in a town in Essex.
And this family, the Stokely family, had set up in 2016,
the company OnlyFans.
Leonard Radvinsky had heard about this website,
and he decided to buy it.
He paid an undisclosed sum for it in 2018.
And I imagine that the Stokely family felt that they'd done quite well from it.
However, they will no doubt be kicking themselves now eight years on because the size of the company has absolutely rocketed.
During the 2020 coronavirus lockdown, streaming services like Netflix and Hulu saw a huge surge in popularity.
However, there is one media company that went under everyone's radar but has taken over the world of entertainment.
Adult entertainment, that is.
Only fans may not be safe for work, but its business model is the envy of the world.
By 2023, Leonid Radvinsky was taking huge dividends out of the company and paid himself $472 million.
By 2024, that had increased to $701 million.
By the time that Leonid Radvinsky died 10 days ago,
His net worth was estimated at $4 billion, or somewhere between $4 billion and $5 billion,
and the company itself was valued at somewhere between $5.5 billion and $8 billion.
OnlyFans is crazy successful, but at some point, Linid realizes he's going to die,
and he tries to sell the company off, supposedly to ensure his family is taken care of once he's gone.
There was an attempt, I think, to sell it last summer that didn't come off.
And then from the beginning of the year, the company went into exclusive negotiations with a San Francisco-based investment fund called Architect Capital.
We know that the sale didn't go through before Radvinsky's death.
But the owner of architect capital James Sagan remains in exclusive negotiations to buy the firm with those interested in looking after the family trust.
Buying only fans isn't like buying Instagram.
So we asked Amelia what challenges come with an acquisition of this sort.
We've seen revenues grow very reliably over the last five years.
There are risks to being in this sector.
Periodically, credit card companies like Visa and Mastercard
will threaten to turn off their payment processing business
if there is robust evidence that any of the content that's being sold on the site is illegal.
And there have been historically, there have been some breaches.
But nevertheless, it's a business that operates in an area that can become risky.
And there is always the risk of banks and credit card operators deciding that they no longer want to operate with the business.
And that would be catastrophic.
OnlyFans is banning porn.
Why?
Well, the company says the decision was made to comply with requests from its banking and payment providers.
OnlyFans doing a total 180, scrapping plans to ban second.
explicit material. It received plenty of pushback from content creators and advocates who argued
that the band would only drive such work underground, thus making it more dangerous.
And also, there's no doubt that AI is going to be a huge disruptive force in pornography globally.
I went to a conference in the autumn where I saw the beginnings of incredibly sophisticated
AI girlfriends and AI models who perform the commands of internet users at the click of a button.
I think probably we're still a few years off that being an existential threat for only fans,
but it's certainly something that the people in the industry are very much aware of and anxious about.
There is a desire to say this is a social media company that it's a business that rests on the empowerment of women, allowing women to make money from taking their clothes off in a way that is sex positive and liberating and isn't something that we should feel concerned about in a progressive society with open-minded views about sex.
That's one side of the argument, I suppose.
But there is a conservative and also a feminist pushback to that that says, actually, even if you're paying the content creators on this site, even if you're allowing them to take 80% of the revenues generated, and even if a small number of women are becoming extremely rich on the back of that,
work, there is still an argument that this perhaps isn't the greatest business to be
involved with, that it is exploitative towards women, that it's grooming an entire generation
of women to believe that self-objectification is an easy way to make a lot of money.
and I think there's a lot of queasiness about the business model.
So although we see a lot of kind of very successful women talking about how much money they've made on the site,
there's another story that talks to a long tale of people who have gone on the site and performed explicit acts
and perhaps haven't made very much money.
So not everybody thinks that this is an incredible tech business that they will want to invest in.
And we didn't even get to the biggest threat to only fans of all.
A trend among young men to quit porn altogether.
We're going to get to that when we're back on today explained.
Support for the show already comes from Acorns.
The money you make today can affect your future, so it helps.
to make a plan. Acorns wants to help you do the most with what you have now so you can
plan for the future you want. Acorns say they're the smart way to give your money a chance to
grow. They say you can sign up in minutes and start investing, even if all you're starting
with is spare change. You can sign up now and Acorns will boost your new account with a $5
bonus investment. You can join the over 14 million all-time customers have already saved and
to invest over $27 billion with Acorns. Okay.
You can head to acorns.com slash explained or download the acorns app to get started.
Paid non-client endorsement, compensation provides incentive to positively promote acorns.
Tier 2 compensation provided potential subject to various factors such as customers' accounts,
age, and investment settings does not include acorns fees slash results.
Do not predict or represent the performance of any acorns portfolio.
Investment results will vary.
Investing involves risk.
Acorns Advisors, LLC, and SEC registered investment advisor, view important disclosures at
Acorns.com slash explained.
Great news. The federal EV rebate is back.
Eligible customers get up to $5,000 with the federal EVAP rebate on select 2027 volt and
26 Equinox EV models.
Visit your local Chevrolet dealer today for more details.
When Westcham first took flight in 1996, the vibes were a bit different.
People thought denim on denim was peak fashion.
Inline skates were everywhere, and two out of three women rocked, the Rachel.
While those things stayed in the 90s, one thing that hasn't is that fuzzy feeling you get when WestJet welcomes you on board.
Here's to WestJetting since 96.
Travel back in time with us and actually travel with us at westjet.com slash 30 years.
Today, explained Sean Ramos from here with Rebecca Jennings, who's a features writer at New York Magazine.
Rebecca, we just heard about some potential threats to only fans, their future.
but you recently wrote maybe about the biggest threat of all.
People quitting porn?
Yeah, people quitting porn.
This is a whole thing.
This is a whole thing.
It's especially a whole thing on like the Manosphere Internet.
I think we've all seen the Louis Theroux documentary
if you've been even a little bit online.
I teach guys to be proper guys,
not these little soy boys, gimps that walk around in the modern day.
I was entering the Manosphere,
a wild frontier of streamers whose behavior is reshaping the culture.
You've seen people talking about what's going on with young guys these days.
And what's going on is that they're really, really, really into self-improvement.
When you do hard things, you then are fortified and reinforced for the inevitable hardship that life is.
Because all of life is hardship with brief moments of bliss, my friend.
Sometimes I have a tough time feeling proud of myself.
Do you know what that?
And I think I've had other people calling our...
our show that have talked about that.
And so part of that is by cutting out things that they believe are bad for them,
porn being one of them.
And so you see a lot of these guys in this manosphere from, you know,
the really, like, toxic red pill guys from, like, Andrew Tate.
And pornography as a whole is simply just, I think,
a tool which is used to ensure that the male populace stays as docile as possible.
To the more centrist, science-based thought leaders like Andrew Huberman and Scott
Galloway who are telling men that you are wasting your life by, you know, cooning to porn.
If your brain learns to be aroused by watching other people have sex, it is not necessarily
going to carry over to the ability to get aroused when you're one-on-one with somebody else.
I remember somebody referencing many years ago when I was first getting in the field that
porn addiction at the time, it was having the same impact on the brain and young men as crack cocaine.
And it's harming your brain.
preventing you from going out, finding a girlfriend or a wife, and just being the best
you you can be.
This is how I went from broke to rich in three months.
The first step is quitting porn.
Put go in here because that's what people like to say now.
And the framing of your piece about this is not really necessarily Andrew Tate or Manusphere.
It's actually the fact that now there's an app for that.
Right.
There's a few apps for that.
But the one I focused on is called quitter.
Quitter without the E.
Quitter without the E.
Of course.
It's sort of vintage like Applespeak, like Grindr or Tumblr.
This is quitter.
And it's founded by two guys.
One, a 20-year-old British kid named Alex Slater and the other 22-year-old American named Connor McLaren.
Both of them grew up very steeped in sort of manosphere or internet ideology.
Why did you start quitter?
Just out of curiosity.
I know what is it about, actually.
Tell everyone what's it about.
So it helps, pretty much just helps guys stop Gounen.
Like, I feel like Andrew Tate pushed this, and Hamza even,
push this self-improvement movement where people wanted to be the best version of themselves.
You know, they were both looking for something that they could get rich on,
and they found out that, like, a lot of men their age are really struggling with
what they believe to be porn addiction, although maybe older people would, like, say,
oh, you're masturbating and watching porn once a day.
That's nothing to be, like, you know, really ashamed about.
But to these men that grew up watching these influencers, they are really, really, they really struggle with that in terms of like what it says about themselves or their self-esteem.
And so they're like, oh, we can capitalize on this.
And so within like two weeks, they built this app called Quitter.
And for $30 a year, it will, you know, help you supposedly quit porn for good.
Did you download the app and figure out how it worked?
Oh, of course I downloaded the app.
I used the app not really in the way it was intended.
but I used it just to see what was going on there.
And the real, the thing that gets written about mostly about this app is that there's a panic button,
which if you start to feel like you want to watch porn, you click a panic button and your phone starts vibrating.
And it immediately turns on the front-facing camera.
And so you just see a picture or a video of yourself.
And like the text will come up on the screen being like,
You're better than this.
Wow.
Remember why you quit.
And it's so funny.
that it helps you, I don't know, suppress the urge to go look at porn by showing you the least sexiest thing on earth, a picture of your own face.
Right. And it's sort of using shame as a way to sort of help people that are struggling with this.
And the other, the thing that really struck me, though, is so much of it is about, like, writing down your feelings and interacting with community members.
There's all these different, like, group chats you can be in. And they're startlingly earnest and a bit, like, sad.
I'm at 25.
I have a crippling porn addiction.
I've spent probably $20,000 on pornography.
I have no sex lives because I have erectile dysfunction
whenever I try to get with a girl.
These young men that, like, are just, I really have no self-esteem
and feel like they don't have control over their lives.
You know what it's like to finish jerking off
and have that shame all over your body?
Even if you go wipe it off, if you put it in a sock,
if you wash your hands afterwards, or in the towel.
when you go back and have dinner with your family,
when your mom says that the food's ready,
you feel the guilt and the shame on you.
And I was just really startled by that
and a little bit moved by that.
And then, you know, you hear all,
you watch some of these Manosphere guys
who are just like ripping into them all the time.
And it's like, God damn, no wonder
you're feeling like such crap about yourselves.
This app, is it popular?
You mentioned there are others?
Yeah, there is.
So when they started, they said there was only like, you know, one or two on the market.
But after the success of quitter, it's really exploded.
Like when you search on the app store for a porn quitting app, there's like a dozen that come up now.
And like addiction quitting apps in general are now really popular things to like vibe coding and stuff.
You know, like on passive income subreddits, people are sharing ways that like they made all this free money basically by making an app with Claudecode or something and then putting it on the app store and then just like watching the money rolling.
So this is now like a pretty popular way of these type of guys to make money.
Okay, but this makes me want to ask, are these guys, you mentioned these young guys, one Brit, one American who started this app, are they doing it to make money?
Or are they doing it to help out their fellow young men who are, you know, falling down these rabbit holes of sex work, pornography, whatever it might be?
I think the answer is very clearly to make money.
But they also know that there is money to be made in helping people.
So I think, you know, these guys are flashy, you know, like they want to drive fancy cars.
This is a pretty surreal environment that I've found myself in.
$10 million Miami house living of all my boys.
We have Lambos, Ferraris, GD. Free Ruses.
They want to have DJ careers and be YouTube influencers.
Like, they're very interested in living the sort of influencer entrepreneur lifestyle
that has been popularized by the Manifier and by people like Logan Polly,
Ben. Like one of them told me they're like, I want to be the next Logan Paul. They're like,
we want to be Andrew Tate, but like with, you know, less toxic. It's like they're very clearly
modeling their careers off of these guys. And so yeah, it's like, I think it's to make money,
but also they know that there's a lot of money to be made in the self-improvement space.
So I think like the way they say it, it's like they want to create like even more apps or more
like e-books and more courses to help men, you know, improve. And we talked recently about this
character James Fishback, who's probably a long shot gubernatorial candidate in Florida, but he
takes aim specifically at OnlyFans and that culture.
If you are a so-called OnlyFans creator in Florida, you are going to pay 50% to the state
on whatever you so-called earn via that online degeneracy platform.
Are these guys, too, presenting Quitter as sort of an alternative to being like a power
user on OnlyFans or is it just porn more broadly or sex work more broadly?
It's Porn Hub and OnlyFans together.
I think like those are really the two like big bads that they're that they believe that
they're up against.
Which is ironic because they're both like living in Miami where all the influence, all the
OnlyFans girls live.
And so it's like there's sort of like two sides of a very similar coin in this in this Miami
kind of escape.
But, yes, they, like, on their, on Quitter's official Twitter, they have tweets where they're, like, they call OnlyFans Prostitution with Wi-Fi and the clearance aisle of femininity.
They say porn stars, like, shouldn't be allowed to have kids.
Also, like, these tweets are very clearly AI generated.
Porn stars shouldn't be able to have kids, guys.
I mean, yeah, it's like, it's like rage bait.
And a lot of that, I would argue, comes from a lot of young men who've seen all, many of their, like, female peers on the internet have huge successes and get,
rich off OnlyFans and they really resent that. And I think that's where a lot of the contempt for
OnlyFans comes from is this idea of like, these women are outpacing you. It's the same argument
that we're having about like women's test scores going up or women in more like scientific
fields. It's like these women are getting rich on the internet because of guys like you. Therefore,
like in order to sort of beat them, you have to sort of overcome that urge to want to pay them
pay them money.
Right.
It really seems to be a lot of this is based off of a resentment that young women are able
to use their sexual power to get rich.
And do you think the fact that so much of this backlash in the manosphere, which of course
is drawing the attention of men who don't consider themselves part of the manosphere, but
it's certainly attracting impressionable young men, do you think it means that only fans,
itself has kind of maybe peaked and is now having some of like a more of a waning influence on say impressionable young men?
I mean, OnlyFans is in a completely different place than it was in the pandemic.
It's been around for 10 years.
But the reason OnlyFans has succeeded is because people trusted enough to put their credit cards in it.
And because the banks for now are allowing the payment providers to be used on Onlyfans.
And if that goes away, which has threatened to do in the past, the whole thing crumbles.
And so it basically depends on where we're at as a culture in terms of how people feel about porn and sex work and sex online.
And if that is changing as a result of these Manifera influencers, then that could really change what OnlyFans is or how we talk about this stuff.
And where we are at as a culture on all this stuff continues to feel sort of divided?
Yeah, like everything, there really is no monoculture anymore.
And so instead you have all of these very fractured communities that all want different things that have no white, have almost no bearing to each other because they exist in completely different planes on the internet.
And these guys are one of them.
Read Rebecca Jennings at NYMag.com.
Thank you so much to Kat Tenbarge for helping us with the show today.
It was produced by Dustin DeSoto, edited by Amina Al-Assadi, fact-checked by Andrea Lopez-Crucée.
and mixed by Patrick Boyd and David Tattachshore.
Today Explained is distributed by WNYC.
The show is a part of the Vox Media Podcast Network.
You can find more shows at podcast.com.
And you can listen to this one ad free at Vox.com slash members.
The rest of us on the team are Noel King, Miranda Kennedy, Jolie Myers, Danielle Hewitt, Kelly Wessinger, Arianna Spuru, Hadi, Mawagdi, Miles Brian, Peter Balinan-Rosen, and Avishai Artsy.
We use music by Breakmaster Scyl, and we want to welcome Gabriel Dunatub to the show.
Great to have you at Today Explained.
