Coco’s public image—both the confident performer and the private person—illustrates that paradox. The same attention that funds a creator’s livelihood can also tether them to a past iteration of themselves. The result: a fractured identity split between what the audience expects and what the creator wants to be. Between 2021 and 2024, OnlyFans’ policies, public relations, and mainstream reputation shifted repeatedly. Each shift rewrites the stakes for creators, who must adapt fast or fall behind. Platforms wield enormous influence: a change in a terms-of-service clause, a celebrity endorsement, or a media scare can reroute entire careers overnight. Creators like Coco navigate not only audience desires but also corporate decisions made in boardrooms far removed from the realities of content creation. Fame, Consent, and the Archive The internet’s archive is both blessing and curse. Content meant for a small, intentional audience becomes a permanent artifact accessible to anyone. Questions about consent — who agreed to what distribution, and what happens when that distribution balloons beyond the original context — are central. For creators who began posting in 2021, the subsequent legal, cultural, and technical environment of 2024 may feel foreign and unforgiving.