My Little Dive into the ‘Porn Star Insta’ Thing
Alright, so the other day, I got kinda curious about something. You hear stuff, right? About how basically everyone’s on Instagram. So I thought, what about folks in the adult industry? Like, do they have regular Instagram accounts? What do they even post? So, I decided to just check it out myself.

I just opened up Instagram on my phone. Didn’t really have specific names in mind at first, just kinda typed in some general stuff related to the industry, you know, trying to see what pops up. Then maybe tried searching terms like the title suggests.
First thing I noticed? It’s a real mixed bag. You get a ton of fan pages right off the bat. Like, loads of ’em. Some look almost real, but you check, and nah, just a fan running it. Then you find some accounts that seem legit, maybe with that blue checkmark, which helps a bit.
So, I clicked into a few of the verified-looking ones. What’s on there? Honestly, mostly pretty standard influencer-kinda stuff. Think about it:
- Lots of selfies, obviously.
- Pictures from photo shoots, but usually the less explicit ones, more like modeling shots.
- Behind-the-scenes glimpses, maybe from sets, but kept very PG.
- Promoting their other sites or platforms – that seemed like a big part of it. You know, pointing folks elsewhere.
- Sometimes just regular life stuff, like pets, food, travel. Trying to show a personality beyond the job.
It wasn’t as wild as maybe some people would think. Instagram’s got rules, right? They gotta stick to the community guidelines, otherwise, the account gets zapped. So, everything’s pretty tame, gotta keep it clean for the platform.
Finding specific people could be tricky sometimes too, especially if they use a different name on Insta than their stage name. And yeah, scrolling through search results, you still see a lot of spammy or fake accounts trying to get clicks.

Overall? My little look-around basically showed they use Insta like a lot of other people or brands do: building a presence, connecting with fans (in a platform-appropriate way), and driving traffic to where they actually do their main business. It wasn’t really shocking, more just… kinda standard social media marketing, but for a very specific industry. Just confirmed they gotta play by the same rules as everyone else on there. That was my little experiment, just satisfying some curiosity.