Bryce’s comments section is tame by comparison. “I don’t know if they thought the socked part made the exorbitant demands more normal, but something about it makes me laugh.”
Still, with 60% of Bryce’s viewers being female, he finds it easier than most other women. “If you’re an app woman who does pottery, I think you can probably get a lot of spooky messages,” he said. Monaco—”no one sees pottery” and “we all know why we see—she said, “I don’t think it’s too bad.” She added, “Most of them are pretty funny.”
Unfamous said influencers may be reluctant to admit that they are deliberately quenching their thirst. “If you’re leaning into it, there’s a negative judgment that comes with it,” she said. It’s cooler to do or pretend to be better than that.”
Unfamous told BuzzFeed News that while it understands the sex appeal of Pottery’s TikTok, thirsty viewers should follow the influencer’s lead when it comes to what they say. “There are boundaries. Some people are cool. [being sexualized], some people don’t,” she said. “Audiences need to take that seriously in terms of consent.”
But for potters like Pottery Boy, horny comments are a small price to pay for success. Although he did not admit to intentionally making his followers thirsty, do We welcome the attention that such viewers bring. in the end, They helped sell all $53 mugs in 40 seconds last yearHis IRL business is also successful. 3 pottery workshops It attracts 350 students a week and plans to open two more this year. “Business is going really well,” Pottery Boy said. “But I don’t think my TikTok can give it full credit.”
“I’m not very phased in how I’m perceived, to be honest,” PotterBoy said. “I want to create content that people want to see so that more people can participate in the sport of pottery. I think my videos do that. That’s the most important thing.People who come looking for pottery and those who come looking for sex appeal are welcome.”