On Saturday October 19, 23-year-old Lily Phillips says she had sex with 101 men in 14 hours.
It sounds like the plot of a B-list adult movie, but the self-proclaimed ‘mattress actress’ claims she consensually filmed every encounter.
One video, which has been viewed more than one million times on X, shows Lily having oral and penetrative sex with five men — allegedly numbers 11 to 16. Another clip captures the aftermath, a bed strewn with used tissues and empty condom wrappers, and bottles of lubricant seeping onto stained sheets.
‘When you’re in sex positions for hours, my actual body, like my limbs, were aching. I felt like I’d been hit by a bus,’ Lily tells Metro.
‘But I enjoy it and I’m passionate about it. I don’t think I’d do these crazy things if I wasn’t.’
‘It’ has earned her a huge amount of backlash on TikTok, with many of the 12 million viewers who have watched her videos suggesting she get some ‘self respect’ and branding her ‘vile’.
There has been, however, notably little vitriol toward the 500 men who had applied to be one of the 101 to have sex with Lily.
Some have since responded to her videos, bragging about their involvement. Metro found five men publicly claiming to be ‘number 54’, ‘number 98’, as well as 48, 67 and 87 in social media posts. Their comments did not attract any form of condemnation.
Originally from Derbyshire, Lily got her start in the adult entertainment industry at the age of 18, when she signed up to OnlyFans and earned £2,000 in just 24 hours doing solo play.
She dropped out of Sheffield University shortly after that, but only began filming porn with men at the start of this year. She says her recent TikTok videos about sleeping with dozens of men a day earn her six figures a month, but declined to be more specific.
Her popularity has grown largely thanks to her association with Bonnie Blue, a fellow OnlyFans adult content creator who went viral after claiming that she slept with 158 men in two weeks. What you might call Bonnie’s ‘unique selling point’ in the over-saturated world of porn is that she sleeps with teenagers who she describes as ‘barely legal’, setting herself up in student-heavy areas during freshers’ weeks across the UK.
Bonnie’s antics have sparked controversy from Mexico to Australia, where she invited 18 and 19-year-olds to sleep with her on Schoolies, a week-long holiday where Year 12 graduates party together after finishing school.
Together, Lily and Bonnie arranged to sleep with a large group of men in a single sitting. That day alone, they say they each had sex with nearly 40 men.
But the pair’s relationship has since soured, with Lily distancing herself after Bonnie was condemned for making misogynistic comments.
When it comes to her ‘extreme’ sex challenges, Lily’s response to critics is that she simply enjoys sex.
‘I love sex, I love everything about it. It’s almost addictive,’ she tells Metro. ‘Plus I love entertaining – I want to make unique content that my subscribers appreciate.’
Lily says she is also driven by a desire to ‘be the best’ in the adult industry.
‘I’m wildly competitive. When I filmed my 101 guys in 14 hours, it felt like my biggest sexual fantasy come true, and now I want to do bigger and better feats,’ she says. ‘The thrill of it drives me crazy – I would never do something I don’t want to do. Maybe it’s a kink? Who knows.’
For those who say Lily is doing it purely for the money, the OnlyFans star says: ‘People can think what they want, that’s totally fine. I earned a stable income from OnlyFans before – I didn’t need to sleep with 101 random men, I did that out of enjoyment.’
The ripple effect of these viral sex challenges have been felt far and wide online. Critics and women’s rights commentators say they perpetuate the outdated misconception that women’s bodies exist exclusively for male pleasure.
It also begs the question of just how damaging this type of porn is when accessed by younger people. However sex therapist and qualified youth sex educator, Ness Cooper, says branding Lily’s activity as ‘extreme porn’ isn’t necessarily helpful.
‘Porn is stigmatised due to it going against social norms, but this doesn’t always mean that the sex portrayed in porn is something people don’t desire or actively engage in outside of porn,’ Ness tells Metro.
‘Porn has been used as an accessible way of social learning around sex and eroticism when other formats of sex education have been censored.
‘We need to stop censoring sex education material from other resources, such as healthy sex education support in schools and colleges, as this will give youth more knowledge and autonomy to safely workout their sex and erotic lives and allow them to judge what is healthy and what isn’t for them.’
Dr Tara, an intimacy and relationships expert, tells Metro that this sexual agency in porn shouldn’t necessarily fuel misogynistic views of women.
It sounds like the plot of a B-list adult movie, but the self-proclaimed ‘mattress actress’ claims she consensually filmed every encounter.
One video, which has been viewed more than one million times on X, shows Lily having oral and penetrative sex with five men — allegedly numbers 11 to 16. Another clip captures the aftermath, a bed strewn with used tissues and empty condom wrappers, and bottles of lubricant seeping onto stained sheets.
‘When you’re in sex positions for hours, my actual body, like my limbs, were aching. I felt like I’d been hit by a bus,’ Lily tells Metro.
‘But I enjoy it and I’m passionate about it. I don’t think I’d do these crazy things if I wasn’t.’
‘It’ has earned her a huge amount of backlash on TikTok, with many of the 12 million viewers who have watched her videos suggesting she get some ‘self respect’ and branding her ‘vile’.
There has been, however, notably little vitriol toward the 500 men who had applied to be one of the 101 to have sex with Lily.
Some have since responded to her videos, bragging about their involvement. Metro found five men publicly claiming to be ‘number 54’, ‘number 98’, as well as 48, 67 and 87 in social media posts. Their comments did not attract any form of condemnation.
Who is Lily Phillips?
Originally from Derbyshire, Lily got her start in the adult entertainment industry at the age of 18, when she signed up to OnlyFans and earned £2,000 in just 24 hours doing solo play.
She dropped out of Sheffield University shortly after that, but only began filming porn with men at the start of this year. She says her recent TikTok videos about sleeping with dozens of men a day earn her six figures a month, but declined to be more specific.
Her popularity has grown largely thanks to her association with Bonnie Blue, a fellow OnlyFans adult content creator who went viral after claiming that she slept with 158 men in two weeks. What you might call Bonnie’s ‘unique selling point’ in the over-saturated world of porn is that she sleeps with teenagers who she describes as ‘barely legal’, setting herself up in student-heavy areas during freshers’ weeks across the UK.
Bonnie’s antics have sparked controversy from Mexico to Australia, where she invited 18 and 19-year-olds to sleep with her on Schoolies, a week-long holiday where Year 12 graduates party together after finishing school.
Together, Lily and Bonnie arranged to sleep with a large group of men in a single sitting. That day alone, they say they each had sex with nearly 40 men.
But the pair’s relationship has since soured, with Lily distancing herself after Bonnie was condemned for making misogynistic comments.
Kink or damaging to feminism?
When it comes to her ‘extreme’ sex challenges, Lily’s response to critics is that she simply enjoys sex.
‘I love sex, I love everything about it. It’s almost addictive,’ she tells Metro. ‘Plus I love entertaining – I want to make unique content that my subscribers appreciate.’
Lily says she is also driven by a desire to ‘be the best’ in the adult industry.
‘I’m wildly competitive. When I filmed my 101 guys in 14 hours, it felt like my biggest sexual fantasy come true, and now I want to do bigger and better feats,’ she says. ‘The thrill of it drives me crazy – I would never do something I don’t want to do. Maybe it’s a kink? Who knows.’
For those who say Lily is doing it purely for the money, the OnlyFans star says: ‘People can think what they want, that’s totally fine. I earned a stable income from OnlyFans before – I didn’t need to sleep with 101 random men, I did that out of enjoyment.’
Does this help or hinder women?
The ripple effect of these viral sex challenges have been felt far and wide online. Critics and women’s rights commentators say they perpetuate the outdated misconception that women’s bodies exist exclusively for male pleasure.
It also begs the question of just how damaging this type of porn is when accessed by younger people. However sex therapist and qualified youth sex educator, Ness Cooper, says branding Lily’s activity as ‘extreme porn’ isn’t necessarily helpful.
‘Porn is stigmatised due to it going against social norms, but this doesn’t always mean that the sex portrayed in porn is something people don’t desire or actively engage in outside of porn,’ Ness tells Metro.
‘Porn has been used as an accessible way of social learning around sex and eroticism when other formats of sex education have been censored.
‘We need to stop censoring sex education material from other resources, such as healthy sex education support in schools and colleges, as this will give youth more knowledge and autonomy to safely workout their sex and erotic lives and allow them to judge what is healthy and what isn’t for them.’
Dr Tara, an intimacy and relationships expert, tells Metro that this sexual agency in porn shouldn’t necessarily fuel misogynistic views of women.