Hailing from Miami, Carmela Clutch began her career in 2019, since then she’s become one of the busiest female performers working today. A perfect example of the future of Adult Entertainment, she takes a hands on approach to all aspects of her brand. Whether it’s content creating, marketing her brand or navigating her way thru the Adult Industry, she handles each task with the same tenacity and authenticity that her fans have come to expect from her. Just passing the 5-year mark in her career, she shows no signs of slowing down, if anything, just the opposite, her popularity is at all-time high and, in her words, she’s just beginning.
Follow her on “X” @carmela_clutch,
Professional bookings through Hussie Models @rickybehavior and @bookwithjay. For all things Carmela. Please go to: https://linktr.ee/carmela_clutch
Photos Courtesy of Carmela Clutch
Interview: Sherman Way
Editor: Ralph Greco jr.
Sw: Sherman Way
CC: Carmela Clutch
SW: Now, tell me if I’m wrong, being successful on OnlyFans, LoyalFans and somebody else’s fans at this point, is more about people getting to know your personality more than people watching get boned.
CC: Hopefully yes. Especially with the amount of access people have to celebrities or public figures, people in adult work, the fact that you can see what our day-to-day life is, hopefully it’s their personality that’s shining through because otherwise you just become noise amongst this, know ocean of Onllyfans creators.
SW: In your opinion, do you think that maybe sometimes people just put up too much?
CC: Yes, and for a few reasons I think it’s not such a good idea to always be posting. Sometimes, you just need a personal moment and that becomes hard when the tradition is that you’re constantly posting. One of the first lessons I learned was if I’m posting about a place that I’m at, I’ve already left that place, so there is that aspect of how isn’t current. Then for safety, it;s not always such a great idea.
I was dating a young woman, and posted in my stories that we were going out and a fan recognized the Jamba Juice or whatever we were at, and came and wouldn’t leave. He parked right behind my car and that was another thing. He knew what my car was and he had the license plate and everything at that point. So it’s a little intimidating sometimes. I think in this day and age, too many people are trying to be influencers and saying stupid shit that they either don’t believe. No one’s ever gonna believe it. Just too much. It’s gotten to be a lot of…listen…there are a lot of issues, a lot more pressing issues going on in today’s world. That, quite frankly, no one cares what my opinion is, right? No one cares what my opinion is about politics, about religion. And you know what? I don’t want them to care about that stuff about my because those are my personal beliefs and you know, at the end of the day, even though I do adult work, it is a character, and that character shouldn’t have any of those strong beliefs and everything like that. That’s a fantasy made for someone to consume the content of. It’s not necessarily 100% me 100% of the time, especially when I get a script from a company and typically they have me playing a very sassy spicy Latina and then you meet me in real life, I have a plethora of squish mallows on my couch because I am just as cuddly and sweet. I’m not really, you know, aggressive like that. But you know, it is a character and I’ve learned to accept that. With that I think, like you say, comes some private moments. Now, that being said, I have shared some intimate stuff with my fans. I’ve let them know when there was a death in the family because I wasn’t going to be on as much and I wanted to explain. I didn’t get into the details, but because that’s not their business, but it was enough to say, hey, you were subscribed to my site and if you see that I don’t respond for a day or two in my DMS, it’s because I’m going through this. Or when I had surgery on my breasts. I had a breast lift and I, you know, I could have just easily been like, no, I’ve been working at no, that’s not realistic. I’d rather let them know that hey, I had a procedure, I’m taking a quick little breather. I’ll give you guys the content that I’ve already made and stored up, but know that it’s not going to be a fresh picture right then and there. I’ve gotten a lot of feedback from fans who say that they really admire and love the authenticity. Because it’s not something you find often, you know people are too concerned about feeding the machine constantly. Putting out content and material and realistically, my body can only do so much of course.
SW: Yeah. So social media wise, where do you draw the line as far as putting stuff up? Because I see a lot of people now that are almost putting up complete scenes for free, and I think it’s not a good idea.
CC: As far as free content, if the company that’s hosting it, you can partner with them, and you have exclusive content from them and that will help drive up traffic, that’s something that I could understand doing for certain purposes or maybe the material, the content is so outdated. It’s so much older. It’s maybe a couple of weeks ago, you changed your hair, you, whatever. And I don’t mind it being out there, that I can understand. I do get a little frustrated because I do feel like people are giving away content more and more when really it should become more from like, a VIP experience, you guys get exclusivity to see the full scenes, you guys get to see the bloopers, you get to see the messy moments and the silly moments and all of that.
SW: Well, in your experience as a business woman and as a performer, by being on Brazzers, or anywhere else, if it’s a free scene they are going to put up, what’s your feeling then?
CC: You know what I? I like to think that it helps and enhances the way that I explained this to some of the newer talent when they ask me the same question is, you know, if I go work for this company called “Bang Bros” that has a channel called “Ass Parade” and that is geared for women with large voluptuous asses. I have one of those. And if I’m coming into the game and I know that I need to expand my viewership and my brand base, I would like to work for companies like that because they have a built-in fan base and that fan base is going to see me and go, ooh, I like that, what’s her name? Then hopefully they’ll go and follow my sites and my links were I have more of that type of content to share with them and give them a more exclusive interaction with me as opposed to the generic company just putting up the scene and maybe answering a few of questions. On my platforms you can speak directly to me and that I think is where you can make a difference and differentiate the two and therefore make it a good reason to work with companies. It’s going to improve viewership and expand your brand recognition.
SW: I don’t know how long you’ve been in business, but is there a point where maybe you say to yourself ‘I’ve been in the industry for two years. I’ve basically worked for everybody now. I’m almost in competition if I keep working for them with myself.’
CC: So there is a little idea of getting higher and higher quality, yes, to an extent, but also no, because those companies don’t have me personally, I am not signed to them. So therefore when you go on my platforms, you can speak directly from to me. You can get a custom with exactly what you like down to what I’m wearing. Whereas you don’t get that kind of say with the company scene. Again, you also get the day-to-day life stuff, people are very curious about how I live my life. What brands I’m wearing. Where do I work out. How do I work out. These are things they want to know about my life and the companies can’t really answer that, even with all their BTS, or interviews on the site. It’s still not the full dose of me. So I don’t think it’s competition so much. I think if you were to open your own website. And have other talents on there, then you would start a competitive edge. But I’ve always been of the mindset of collaboration, not competition because there’s space for everyone. There’s room for everyone here. There’s plenty of money to go around in this industry so long as you can stay consistent and hardworking and you know, learn as you go.
SW: And how you collaborate, how does that all that for you?
CC: I look at a few things. I do look at their numbers on social media platforms because that helps me determine whether or not they’re going to be able to market and promote the scene with me alongside me. I look at what I call a catalog of my work already. I like to think of my work as a catalog. I have a lot of this category. I have a lot of that category. I don’t have this category. I need that category. What is that? Let’s say it’s. I need more MILF scenes. Well, you know what? Let me start working with some younger guys so that I can kind of MILF myself up for those scenes. Or you know what? I don’t have enough girl-girl. Let me go ahead and book some more content with girls or. And it even goes down to blondes or Latinas or, you know, Asian dudes. It goes to all genres and categories that you can think of. If you think of your work as a catalog and you diversify it, you’ll do better. I think I made that mistake coming in that I didn’t really diversify my Portfolio right out the gate; I stuck with my niche.
Looking back I’m like ‘Ohh well I could have done that differently.’
SW: When you shoot, is it stuff you wanna shoot or stuff you think will sell?
CC: Hmm. It’s a little bit of both. There are definitely things that I shoot because I get asked. My content that’s driven towards that is definitely something that people are asking more of so that I’m more pursuing. But then there are things that where I say, ‘He looks like he would be fun to work with.’ And so I’ll go and work with him, you know, and that’s just based on pure attraction and chemistry, you know, So it’s a little bit of both.
SW: Do you do custom work on your OnlyFans or LoyalFans?
CC: Yes.
SW: So what’s the craziest custom you did?
CC: I had a custom that was 15-minute cucking where he wanted me and a male performer to perform together and we got elaborate, we got into it. We made it into a whole scene. There were angles, that we did. Um, basically he’s he walked in and caught me with my trainer in the bathroom and I made him sit in the shower and watch me get fucked in front of him and then you know, involved him as in the camera and it was really fun as I got to explore a side of myself that I don’t normally do, which is being a little bit more dominant. And it intrigued me. So I really enjoyed it. And you know what? He absolutely loved the scene, so much so that he ordered several more customs right afterwards,
SW: So then, are you generally submissive? Just sexually submissive, or submissive in all aspects of your life?
CC: I think when I was younger I was a bit more submissive. Umm. I think that as I’ve grown into this role and grown as a woman, personally, I’ve become a lot more dominant. You know some of it is because of experiences and some of it is just growth within myself. I think that as I get into my mid 30s now, I’m a lot less submissive, maybe this is the MILF thing talking because so many times lately I’ve taken the lead in scenes, it may become a little bit more natural, maybe I’ve built up some confidence that i didn’t have before. And I’m really grateful to the industry because i didn’t have that confidence before and I absolutely got that while working in in the industry.
SW: This is a business where younger, 18-year-old girls are what the business thrives on, but yet MILFs seem to be a whole lot more popular and a very steady niche. Almost more popular than the 18-year-olds. Why do you think that is?
CC: Man, that’s a really good question.
When I came into the industry, I was very hesitant about being categorized or labeled as a MILF. I still don’t always. I get to set and I look the same age as some of my counterparts. And you know, it doesn’t help that I’m a shorty and they’re usually taller than me. I think Milf has grown as a category. We have some really incredible talents like Cherie Deville who really take the character and make it more robust. So whereas we’ve had MILFS that were just like, “Go to your room” before, she actually takes it to another level. She seduces you as a MILF and it could also just be the generation. It could be that. I’m not quite sure. But it is a steady category. I see it consistently within the top five searches on across all platforms and tube sites and.I think there is something to be said about a woman who stands in her power, who knows what she wants and isn’t afraid to ask for it old enough to know what she wants and how to do it young enough to still enjoy it. So that sweet spot is, I think something that people do look towards and maybe that’s why milf has popped off so well.
SW: What you just mentioned and we started with there being the character, for you, sexually, Is that where you’re at on camera, is that where you’re at off camera.. So does it radiate and show everybody that, you are a character or is that completely different?
CC: I think it depends on the situation. There are times where I still get a little bit star struck. Certain performers that I maybe grew up watching or that I admire their work so much. I might get a little bit more shy or a little less confident, but for the most part, I think being in the industry made me more confident, living my day-to-day life and being more confident and being more secure in running my business, o wning my brand, creating content I’ve developed a more confident way of being, and it’s just kind of one has fed the other. It is a character, but the character is very much based on me. It’s exaggerations of me. I am a hypersexual person by nature.. I’m literally the friend that you knew growing up that would always crack the ‘that’s what she said joke.’ Now that I’m all grown up, you know I’m still very sexual now. Would I go and say things like that in front of my friend’s kids or at, you know, different situations? Probably not. But my character would. She wouldn’t give a shit.
SW: ‘m guessing you’re single and you date, so if you meet somebody, do you sometimes maybe intimidate men because A, you’re good looking woman, B, you’ve got a whole lot more sexual experience.
CC: Absolutely I do. Absolutely I do. Automatically, I’ve had it happen in my personal life. There was, many moons ago, before I was in any adult film I was on a date with a gentleman. We had been out for maybe like a week or two and I decided that, you know, I wanted to give him a little bit of a blowjob and I started going down on him and teasing him and giving him the eyes and being super sexual. At the end of it, he told me it was the best blowjob he had ever had and then he broke up with me because he was intimidated that he wouldn’t be able to keep up or that it meant that I was loose because I was so good at it, I simply told him I’ve had two boyfriends in my life prior to him. They were both long term, and the reason why I got really good at blowjobs is because both of those boyfriends really enjoyed head. They taught me how to do it in a way that felt really good for them. I’ve learned that it was communication. it was actually the opposite of what he was thinking. And when I explained that to him, he was like, “ I’m so sorry. I’m an idiot. I’m an idiot. Can we go back out?” I was like, “Absolutely not. No, you are not confident enough to be with someone me.
SW: What kind of man doesn’t want a woman who gives a good blowjob?
CC: That’s what I’m saying. I enjoy it, I love giving a good blowjob. There’s a certain personality that comes out with that. With each person I can tell what they like and what they don’t like, and I like to cater to that because I like to see my partner enjoy themselves. It was quite a shock for me when he told me he wanted to break up because of that.
SW: Since we’re discussing BJs, do you remember the first time you gave someone a BJ.
CC: Yes I do. I wasn’t very good at it. I didn’t know what I was doing. I didn’t. I didn’t know what to do, how to it. I didn’t know the mechanics of it. So.It lasted maybe like 2 seconds and he was like come here and just kind of threw me down and it was, you know, the same time I lost my virginity. It was very short and I think a few months later I ended up dating someone and he took the time to kind of, So I really like this, I don’t like that. And then, you know, common sense. Watching someone’s body and reaction in their body language, their breath changing with different motions or different techniques. That was really when I realized, ohh, I enjoy watching the other person get off. So if that means that I can make it happen for them, that’s even more of a turn on. It wasn’t long before I started learning how to do it properly, but that first time I feel bad, was not my greatest
SW: So, you would say you give a good blowjob then.
CC: Yes, I would. I would say so. I have only because I’ve been told by several people in the industry who I believe are or where I could consider to be. You know, OG, they’ve been around for a long time and to hear them say, hey, when we worked together, you gave me the best blowjob I’ve ever had and I’m like, you’ve been in the industry for 15 to 20 years. Are you serious? I’ll take that. Thank you. it was a great moment for me I had a great day on set that day.
SW: Are you a spit person, a hand person…what’s the key to a great blowjob for you?
CC: I’m a sloppy spit person. I definitely like to add a lot of spit. I’m a little bit of a chameleon. Again, I like I, I said before I mentioned I love to watch the other person get off. And if I can make that happen, if I can facilitate that, it turns me on. Even more. So if I’m noticing that I’m going down and I’ve got it nice and sloppy and I run my fingers along the sides of his balls and I like with the little nails and I give it a little nice little tickle. I start massaging his balls and he starts liking it. I’m gonna keep doing that. If I get it down on it and make that little gagging sound and he likes that I’m gonna go for that. I’m gonna do that more if I start pepper grinding, what I call the pepper grinding with the head swirling, right? And I see that he really likes that. I’m gonna do that. I’ve had guys that I’ve worked with who like it when you run your teeth along the shaft of their dick. That is not something I would normally go to. However, If that’s what you like, I’m gonna do that. I’m gonna do the hell out of that. So I kind of feel like.I have a few go-to techniques, but for the most part I like to change it up every now and again. Plus, it keeps them like guessing what’s gonna come next. ‘Oh my God that feels so good. Oh my God that feels even better.’ You know, that’s fun for me. I love doing the same with women too. I’m pansexual. I love women. I love men. T girls, everything.
SW: Do you ever have a sense of power over men when you have his penis in your mouth?
CC: A little bit, yes, but even more so when I have his penis in my mouth and a finger in his ass.. Which I’ve had before. I’ve had guys actively asked me to finger their ass while I give them head and sometimes it’s even on set. They’re like, can you do it without the camera seeing it, I’m like sneaky. I like it.
SW: How about rim jobs, do you like doing them?
CC: So my only issue with rim jobs is this, and it’s the only other surgery I would get other than the breast lift that I got. The web of my tongue comes all the way to the tip, and so my tongue is not very long. So my only issue with rim jobs is it’s kind of hard to get in there the way I would like to. If I could, I would just shorten or cut some of the web.out of my underneath my tongue so i could have more dexterity and i would really enjoy it a lot more because then i’d be able to do
SW: Have you ever used your oral abilities to get something you wanted?
CC: I mean, I may have, I may have while in a relationship. Giving head to stop watching a really boring movie. And I couldn’t even tell you what the movie was. But yeah, I was bored and I didn’t like the movie he chose, so I gave him head and I wasn’t gonna watch it, so neither was he. Oops, we ended up not watching it.
SW: Adult material in general, do you think people take it too seriously and forget that it’s entertainment? Do you have responsibility to kind of let people know, like, hey, this is a fantasy. This isn’t like how you should treat your wife or your spouse. Because it seems like a lot of people use porn for sex. Ed 101.
CC: I actually have a good analogy for this. I have a friend who teaches sexual health and she was teaching it out of school and she decided to introduce the topic in this way. She put on a clip of Fast and the Furious, the very end, where they’re jumping the tracks right. It shows the car with the engine and the gas going through and all that. She shows that little clip until they’re about to jump the tracks and she stops it. She goes “Alright, tell me five things you know about cars. Go.” And they’re like um, ah… and she goes similarly what you see in porn, adult content is only a small fraction of what it consists of, for two people having sex and playing out these fantasies. I do think there is a certain amount of responsibility that we have as performers to explain to people that a lot of these times, it’s not realistic. You can’t just walk up to your stepmom and smack her on the ass. You shouldn’t walk up to any woman and just smack them on the ass unless you know that it’s going to be OK and you have consent. These are things that that aren’t really spoken of. The other thing I would also mention is that porn gives you that little sensation for this amount of time, and usually the goal is to ejaculate, come, climax or whatever as quickly as possible. When you’re the viewer in real life, you don’t want to come that fast. You’re not trying to get to two pumps and done it. I think that in a way, porn has made it easy for people to just do that and they end up shooting themselves in the foot almost. Because when they come down to throwing down with your girl or your woman and you last three pumps, she’s upset with you, you know, you got no one to blame but yourself and as far as porn goes, yeah, it is our responsibility to kind of let them know that this is a fantasy. This is not how it would play out in real life.
I’ve been at a convention and I was taking a picture with a fan, I bent over and he wound up and went, SMACK, really hard across my ass. Now he doesn’t realize that I bruise very easily. My whole ass cheek was inflamed. I immediately started bruising. I looked at him and I said “Now I can’t work for the next week. Thanks.” You get one. The next one I’m having the the bouncers, security drag you out because that’s not OK. For anyone, Occasionally I’ll play it off like “That hurt, don’t do that.” But this one he like wound up as if he was waiting and that was a lot. On camera that might not be my response, because I know it’s coming. I already know what we’re doing. In real life you gotta check with people, you don’t want anything done without your permission.
SW: Where are you from originally?
CC: I’m from Miami originally, born and raised.
SW: Public school?
CC: Yes, i went to a public school most of my life.
SW: Did you have any favorite subjects?
CC: School was always very hard for me. I’m dyslexic. I have ADHD, which makes it a little bit hard. I really loved English. I loved biology and social sciences. Those were subjects that I was good at. I liked art, but I I can’t draw or sketch, I wasn’t artistically inclined in that way. I do, however, paint now and lots of my artwork hangs around my house. So, in school, my biggest thing I would daydream a lot and my parents would always ask me why. What are you daydreaming about? I could never tell them what it was because I felt embarrassed. But you know, at the time, I was daydreaming of kissing boys or girls or fucking them. I had fantasies of gangbangs with the teachers and the students and all sorts of things. So I was definitely one of those kids that did slightly above average, just enough to stay below the radar. Ironically, I read a study that said that the students that were like C+ students are the ones that tend to do better in life because they usually work for themselves and things like that and I thought that was pretty interesting.
SW: In high school, were you a popular girl, a geek, a nerd?
CC I was such a nerd that people knew me as a nerd. They;d say, “Hey, that girl, she’s a nerd.” I also wasn’t allowed to go to parties or stay out late or anything. If it wasn’t school related, I wasn’t going so. That kind of inherently labeled me as a nerd, and then I just felt more comfortable with people who, you know, had the same restrictions and you know, had to live in the same lifestyle parameters. So I was definitely a nerd.
But it;s funny. I still keep in touch with some of the people I knew back in high school. And they were like, “Oh, man, I saw this interview where you said you were thinking of, daydreaming of gang gangs and was I ever in any of them?” I was like, “Yes, yes, you were. Yeah, absolutely you were. You were absolutely one of the stars there” And they’re like, “OK, so what about now?” I say, “Should have asked me then.”
SW: Were you popular with boys?
CC: No, I struggled with obesity most of my life, eating disorders and all of that. That’s why I’ve made it such a prominent part of my brand now of trying to be healthy, of presenting a healty lifestyle. So I was not popular with the boys. The one guy I had a crush on told me that he thought I was too innocent to date. And he was afraid he’d corrupt me. I was like, ‘Ohh, you have no fucking idea or clue, no idea.’ I wonder how Alex is doing now. I wonder if he watches my stuff. That would be pretty cool, but yeah, I still talk to a couple of my friends from middle school and high school and they’ve all told me the same thing, that hey were blown away. Even my personal friends were blown away when I started working in the industry because they had no idea that I was secretly this freak who wanted to do gang bangs and be tied up and all of that stuff.
SW: Have any of these guys you knew in high school brag now on social media that they either knew you before you were famous or banged you before you were famous?
CC: One of them for sure does. Maybe two. And one of the two, actually, couple years back, Face timed me and I was on set getting my makeup done and I thought, ‘Ohh man, somebody died. Oh no, something happened.’ So I answered it. Morbid curiosity. And he was like, he was there with a bunch of his friends, saying “Yeah, I know her. I know her. I know Carmela Clutch.” I was like, ohh wait, I wasn’t prepared for that .But we talked about it and he apologized because, you know, you have no idea if I was on set or anything like that. I thought something serious happened. We don’t ever call each other to talk and catch up about the day. But he wanted to brag to some of his friends. If I were him, though, I wouldn’t be bragging too much. The one or two times I did fuck him post high school, he was all right. We had fun for about ten minutes and then he’d finish and I wouldn’t be done. So I’d leave him and go to another guy.
He couldn’t get the job done. It’s not my fault.
SW: I know people use handles and stuff on your platform, but have you ever thought maybe when one of your teachers joined in, or somebody from school.
CC: I think about it all the time. I really do. Sometimes I’ll see the name Kyle or, you know, any of the names of the people I know, and I’m just like, Oh my God, is this this person? And sometimes it’ll turn me on a little more because it’ll usually happen while I’m doing like a live show. So I’m like, in my head, I played it out as a fantasy of like, oh, they’re watching me now. I’m gonna give them even more of a show and I’ll find out either it was or it wasn’t them, and it’s pretty interesting in that way. I had one, I have a friend of mine who is a comedian currently and he popped in and I think I was, you know, maybe whatever amount away from the tip goal and he’s like, “What are we doing tonight?” And I said “Well, I’m trying to squirt for these guys, but we haven’t gotten to the tip goal. So you know, tell me what you want me to do. I’ll pop out a tit, flash or whatever.” And he said, “How much is it?” And boom he dropped it. I was like, “Oohh, OK, well watch this.” because I had already had a fantasy with him and, you know, wanted to do stuff with him. He’s very funny and we’ve had a great time just being friends. I thought it would be a really fun hookup. So I took that opportunity to kind of draw from that fantasy and I actually have a post of the live video of me cleaning up the squirt that is clear over eight feet. I just projectile-d at that point because it was so much of this sexual tension and frustration built up with that particular person that when he came in the floodgates opened up.
SW: When you saw Adult material earlier in your life, did you know what sex was and all of that?
CC: I honestly don’t know. I grew up in the 90s and movies were a little bit more risque than they are right now. So movies like “Wild Things” came out,that pool scene and that threesome? Oh my God, I had so many fantasies about all three of them. I think maybe it was that, you know, watching Cinemax late at night, putting aluminum foil on the antenna tweaking it so that I could see exactly what’s going on. Try and get catch a glimpse of a nipple. Then the Internet came and boom! I think you know, between all of those, I kind of figured it out myself.
SW: And when you actually saw adult material, did the thought ever cross your mind where you said, ‘Yeah, I could do that.’
CC: A couple of times. And remember at the time that I grew in there were shows the Girls Next Door show. I looked at that lifestyle and I said, “Damn, I really wish I could.” I thought about it and I realized I didn’t look like that, you know, all those girls were blonde and all super thin. I don’t look like that. And then I thought, what would my family say? How would society look at me? I’m supposed to go to school and so I did all the things I was supposed to do. I went, graduated. I actually graduated with honors. I went to college. I graduated with honors, did all these things. I worked for all these different companies that were big major brands. I was very successful in them, but I wasn’t happy and I had that thought of, ‘Well, you remember that fantasy you had before of doing that? Yeah, maybe we do that now.’ I thought about it, and new it would mean me sacrificing everything. My anonymity, my privacy. My family. You know, being considered an outcast from society, and in a way. That was scary at first. But once I made the decision to do it, I pursued it with every fiber in my being and I was relentless. I’ve been doing this for almost five years and I’ve been relentless. I’ve seen people come and go to from six months to two years and have full careers and be completely happy with their career, but that was never my plan.When I entered this, I knew it was gonna be for the long haul.
SW: You finish high school. Do you go straight into college or did you have a job in between?
CC: I went straight into college. I did have a job at the time. I worked for a shoe store. I was a salesperson at a mall, straight out of high school. At that point, I realized I have the gift of gab. I can create a conversation with anyone. I’ll talk to a wall if you let me. I kind of realized, okay, well. Maybe I’m not the prettiest person around, because I definitely had some self-esteem issues at that point, and I was a heavier set girl, which society standards at the time dictated that that wasn’t considered typical beauty. I realized, okay, well, I can kind of be charismatic. I can have charisma, and be able to interact with people. That was a great moment. After that, I went into college and I kind of stayed working there for a little while. I didn’t have a job for a while because I was in college. When I graduated, I had several career paths that I tried that just didn’t work out for me. I didn’t enjoy them as much as I thought I would.
SW: But you got a degree in marketing and business, right?
CC: Marketing and advertising and a minor in psychology and sociology.
SW: When you get in this business, how do you apply those things to this industry?
CC: Oh, I use my degrees now more so now than I ever have. Now, granted, marketing in today’s world, as opposed to 10, 15 years ago, it’s really changed, you know, social media, the internet has really changed the way that we consume and brand and market and sell. That being said, the psychology behind it is still the same. Even when I worked in marketing and advertising fields prior to adult work, I didn’t have as much control over the brands. I didn’t have the have license to do what I wanted to do to, to grow the brand the way I saw it could grow. That could be very frustrating. So being able to have control over this brand, to be able to grow it, to see it go from literally an idea in my head to something that people will recognize. It’s so humbling, so fulfilling. Also while working in marketing for other companies, I didn’t feel the greatest about myself because I knew that a lot of the things that we were doing to get sales were often, you know, not bad per se, but we were definitely looking for ways to get people to buy and consume more and more. Knowing that, this single mother of three can’t really afford all of this stuff. Now I’ve introduced all of this stuff to their kids and now their kids want the whole package and they can’t really afford it, I felt bad about myself. I wasn’t helping out anyone. I wasn’t inspiring anyone. I wasn’t doing any good in the world. I don’t pretend what I do now is insanely important, but at the very, very least when someone is lonely and needs to DM someone and they end up DMing me on OF, I respond and they have someone to talk to. What’s more, I have a little bit more control over the brand and what I do with it. And that’s also very empowering as well.
SW: Good marketing for sake of discussion. Is it confidence? Is it good bullshitting? Is it good physicality?
CC: I think it’s, for me, it’s not just appearance, it’s good business. So it’s being able to, yeah, show up on time, the brand looking good, but then to be able to look someone in the eye and hold a conversation. Then after you’ve networked with them, do a follow-up and make sure that, hey, it was great meeting you, I would love to work with you and your brand and the future projects. It’s about holding up your end and making things fair. So, sometimes that comes with a little give and take. I don’t wanna necessarily use too many examples because I don’t want to put too many brands out there. I think that it’s about having a, a certain standard to live to, your word. So when I tell people, when I tell my fans, I will answer your DMS, I will answer your DMS, me, I will do it. You know, when I say that I will get you your custom within this amount of time, I will do it. When I tell a company, I will be there at this time, this day, hair and makeup ready. I will be there at that time, ready to go with a can-do attitude, like, let’s rock this. I think that’s what makes good business and good marketing. I think like we mentioned before, a certain level of authenticity. I think people are far too smart because they are so exposed to the world that if you are being fake, it will be exposed. What’s done in the dark always comes to light. And if what you’re portraying is not your truest, authentic, most authentic self, it’s gonna show. I think that that’s, at least for me, that’s been the thing that people tell me they like most about me is that what you see, even though it’s a character, I am hypersexualizing myself. I’m still very much myself when you meet me at a convention center for a, you know, a meet and greet, what you’re seeing here on this interview is what you’re gonna see over there except dolled up a little bit more. You know, there’s gonna be some makeup.
SW: Now, the sexist side of this discussion, how much more difficult is it because you’re a beautiful woman when you go into marketing and all that?
CC: Even though it can be a little sexist here and there, for the most part, women have found ways to take ownership of their brand. Platforms like OnlyFans and LoyalFans and whatever fans have really given that to us.
In a way, we’re very lucky because a lot of generations didn’t have that before. As far as people assuming that I’m a dumb bimbo, that happens quite frequently. And that’s why I make it a point to do as many interviews as I can. That’s why I make it a point that when I am at a convention, I don’t care if the people that I’m working for is telling me, okay, 30 seconds with each fan, that’s it, 30 seconds. No, that’s not me. You’re getting two to three minutes. If I have no line, you’re getting five minutes of my time. As much time as I need to connect with that fan. We have conversations. I’ve had fans start showing me pictures of their family. I’ve had fans bring over their wife. I meet them and we take pictures and we talk. So I think that there’s a certain amount of inherent, “Oh, you must be a dumb idiot. All you do is lay on your back there”. No, there’s so much more that goes into this. You cannot survive or last in this industry for years or half a decade if you aren’t a savvy business woman, if you don’t reinvest into your brand, that is probably the biggest thing. There’s no way if you showed up to set late, drunk, unclean and unkept, you’re not going to work for very long. The same token of if you’re not promoting your material, if you’re not marketing your stuff, you’re not going to last very long either. So with that takes intelligence. That is intelligence to be able to stay relevant like that, quick in your head, everything you just said, instead of just being, I get to fuck pretty dudes all day. Like, no, this is a business and I treat it like a business. It took me maybe my first six months to a year, because there’s a certain amount of shine everyone gets at the very beginning of their career of, you’re the new girl, we need the new girl, we want the new girl and you’re just fucking everything in sight. I did get a little bit of bad advice here and there from people who maybe didn’t have my best interest. So there was a learning curve for me. But once I got a better handle on it, and again, as I’ve grown into this and matured, I started at 30. So it wasn’t like I was particularly young when I started, but I was definitely a little more naive. As I matured in this industry, I realized, oh, this is a catalog of my work. It’s not just me fucking whatever I think is sexy, you know? Oh, there’s a method to this madness. If I really want to continue on and see it grow, I’m going to have to play ball. That means, you know, learning how to edit my stuff, how to market my stuff, how to promote myself and which events I need to go to and, you know, how to dress for the red carpet down to how to pose, because that’s still something that I’m learning and constantly trying to grow is my ability to market, pose, model, whatever it is that I have to do. As you grow in this industry, hopefully you get some brand endorsements and people ask you to do some things.
SW: So, if someone wanted to collab with you, what would it take for you to collab with them?
CC: With him specifically? Yeah, we’ve talked about it. I would like to collab with him, but I’d like to do something also in his realm. I love doing skits. I love doing funny stuff. I love showing my personality. I’m not just a sex doll. And so we’ve discussed a few ideas. We’re both from Florida, so we have some things to draw on and I would definitely do it. If we can incorporate some kind of funny skit leading in so that way he can cross promote it with me. Obviously, if I promote it on my side, it’s going to be all sexual, but you know, it’d be nice to like cross things like that. I like that collaboration idea of like cross promotion. You do something different from what I do. Let’s do something together.
SW: The reason I ask is a bunch of girls, a lot of girls in fact that we spoke to in January at AVN, having issues with a bunch of fans coming up to them claiming they had OnlyFans accounts that they wanted to collab.
CC: With my friend, I’d collab with him because I know him personally, right? I I know him. I taught him where to go to get tested, in fact. He goes and gets tested regularly now and because he has his own following. So, a lot of this is marketing. It’s business. If you have no way of marketing it to a large crowd, a large demographic of people, then I’m doing more for you than you are doing for me. This is a business partnership, so it needs to be good for both people. You know, some guys will be like, “Whoa, I’ll give you good dick.” I’m swimming in dick, I don’t need that. I don’t need it. Like, no thank you. And I don’t care how great your dick is, I have access to the world’s best fuckers. Literally. Don’t need to have yours. So as far as doing collaborations with what the industry so lovingly calls ‘civilians’, people not in adult work, I’m not all for it. I’m pretty actually opposite of that. I won’t work with people who have no brand or are brand new unless I buy the rights to that content, meaning I pay them, I keep the rights and I decide whether or not I want to put it out or not based on your performance. If your performance is great, I’ll put it out; if it’s only so, it may never see the light of day.
SW: For you then what is a good scene? Is a good scene chemistry? Is a good scene lighting? Is good scene, angles.
CC: It’s a little bit of everything. The chemistry is important and I think that that can be portrayed on camera and people can pick up on that and they want to see good chemistry. But beyond the chemistry, it doesn’t necessarily have to be good lighting, but you should be able to see penetration. Same thing with the angles. It doesn’t have to be the best angles. Some of the best content I’ve ever shot has been setting up the cameras, knowing where they are and just kind of going for it and enjoying the moment because they get that authenticity of chemistry. But if you can’t see anything the whole time, well then what we did was not content. It was a sex tape. And that may or may not be worth anything. It’s a little combination of things. As far as a great scene, I really do enjoy good chemistry, great hygiene. One of the content creators I worked with recently, his name is Apollo. He’s from Australia. I didn’t know what to expect, but he’s been content creating for a few years now and I went and I met him at his hotel. We exchanged tests, we filled out paperwork. He had lighting and everything set up. He already had reels and tik toks and stuff that he wanted to do to promote the scene. We did those really quick. We were in, out and done in two hours. That is a great scene and I’m happy with it. That to me, all those factors, those variables, the actual sex itself was amazing. I’m not gonna lie about that. All of those qualities create a great scene. I was safe, It was clean, it was expeditious. We were in, we were out, we knew what we wanted to do, We got it done and he got the content to me in a very timely manner. If I’m not going to leave with the content right then and there, I want it within a day or two and then on top of it, we coordinated a release day that worked for both of us, so we had time to promote it and then released it at the same time. All of these factors made for a really great experience. And so now when I have female talent that comes up to me “Hey, would you work with this person again?” Absolutely I would.
SW: Do your fans have a preference between POV type material or the glam stuff or?
CC: I think more and more I’m finding a lot more people wanting POV because it’s easier for them to imagine themselves. But POV can be incredibly difficult to shoot if you don’t have a videographer. A lot of the times, especially if you’re working with a content creator who may not have the equipment or experience to stabilize the camera, you know, there’s a whole lot of booty bouncing up and down in all sorts of ways. And if you can’t keep it steady, then what are we doing here.
SW: how did you get started in this industry?
CC: On my way to the Peace Corps, the summer of 2019, my invitation was rescinded because I was supposed to go to Wuhan, China. I didn’t know why they had rescinded it, I was upset. At the time I had taken a part-time job as a assistant to a content creator and I saw firsthand how I could apply my degrees and I saw that it wasn’t this world of people that had no families, had no friends. I saw that that was just a misconception and I decided I want to do this. I’m going to do this. And I pursued it feverishly, maybe a little too much though, but I don’t regret it. I love it. It’s given me so many opportunities. I’ve grown so much as a woman, as a person, as a business woman, as an entrepreneur. This industry has given me a lot. And although it requires a lot of sacrifice, for me, has been worth it.
SW: Sacrifices, are they more physical or more psychological?
CC: Both. You know, my knees are not what they used to be. My back, I’ve got a little patch on my back right now. My back is tweaking a little bit from working out and from arching and all that. Mentally, I’ve experienced people randomly, “I know what you do, you whore”, out on the street. I happen to be at a grocery store just getting some groceries and someone recognized me. I guess it was her son that recognized me and explained who I was. Lady, you’re the one that needs to have parental control on your devices, not me. I didn’t do it, like what? I’m just living my life. So in some ways, you know, I have very, a lot less privacy. I recently suffered a death in the family and I was traveling from the East Coast back to the West Coast. I’m sitting at the airport bar and someone comes up, I’m crying, tears in my eyes are streaming down my face and someone comes up to me and asks for a picture. I normally have a rule that as long as I’m not with family, I will go and take the picture. Luckily, someone, a very kind stranger next to me goes, Hey, buddy, don’t you see she’s having a rough day? Why don’t you leave her alone? Just give her a minute. You can take a picture another time. I was really appreciative of that. But it is a matter of privacy. We don’t get that much. I sacrificed my biological family. They didn’t want me around or a part of the family because I chose this profession. Luckily, I have the most incredible support system of Framily, friends that I call family, my chosen family back home who have embraced me, loved me, and really have been there for all the ups and downs since. So there’s been some sacrifice, both physically, mentally, emotionally.
SW: Over the last two years, we’ve had a bunch of people sadly pass away. Do you think this industry puts that much pressure on you to push yourself to that point, or do you think there were problems before?
CC: That’s kind of the chicken or the egg, huh? I think in order to be in this industry, you have to be incredibly good at compartmentalizing. And that goes for any entertainment industry where you’re in the public eye. You have to be able to compartmentalize. Now, granted, I’m not always the best. The example of being at the airport restaurant and not being able to control my tears. You know. If I wasn’t really good at compartmentalizing, You can’t get through life unscathed. There’s no way that you can make it to your 30s, 40s, or even 20s without having undergone or went through something that was traumatic. Now how you choose to cope with it is your own way of coping with it. I do think the industry puts an enormous amount of pressure on staying relevant. Oh, the new Carmella Clutch. I’m not done being Carmella Clutch. How could there be another one? But knowing that you as a person are always gonna be relevant, you as a person are always going to exist and having a strong support system and foundation of people that you can go to and speak to them about what life is throwing at you, I think that’s really important to have. And it’s really sad that we’ve lost so many people recently. It’s very scary too, because it’s not always within their control. Sometimes it’s an outside presence that has determined that they will no longer exist on this planet. That’s really rough too, you know? Again, it’s a sacrifice. Safety is a sacrifice that, one of the sacrifices we make because we don’t know who recognizes us from a distance. It’s really unfortunate. As far as vices go, we all have our vices. It’s how you deal with them. I think there needs to be more support. I know we have Pineapple support and they’re fantastic, but there needs to be more support for actors and actresses in this industry. At the end of the day, we’re people too, we’re human. And we have good days and bad days and we all have our own traumas. It’s hard to get around it. It’s really hard to be two people at once. It’s really hard to be your public figure self, your on camera self, and also attend to your personal life. It is like juggling constantly.
SW: Well, when did you develop a very thick skin or do you just avoid the noise or how do you handle the constant, oh, you’re this and oh, you’re that or you go on social media and so forth.
CC: A little bit of all of the above. I love the block button. If you say something on my friends’ posts that I don’t like, I’m blocking you. I don’t care. You don’t exist to me. I wish there was a block button in real life. As far as creating a thicker skin, absolutely, this industry will give you a thicker skin, or you will not be in it. Because at the end of the day, when someone says, ”Yeah, she’s very pretty, but I’m not gonna hire her for my site,” you have to know that it’s because they don’t sell your brand. There are so many brands that sell that 18, 19 year old little spinners that won’t have me on there. I can’t take that personally, I just can’t. That’s something you have to learn. As far as compartmentalizing, I think that’s important, but then having a way of getting it out. So for me, I love art. I will go and paint ceramics and I’ll go and paint on canvas and I’ll go and terribly sketch something or I’ll go and just journal for 15 minutes out of the day just to get everything out. I’ve even gone to places like those smash places where you like break a bunch of stuff, just cause it’s cathartic personally and more recently what I’ve been doing has been working out. I will go and wait, train for an hour or two every day and then I’ll go to a self-defense class. Which is my way of regaining some control and power over the idea that my level of security is not the same as for everyone else because someone might recognize me and think that I have jewelry or money on me or think that, oh, I saw her be submissive in the scene, she’s just gonna give it up to me and if not, I’m just gonna take it.
SW: Did you lose your Virginity at 17, is that correct?
CC: Yes, that’s true.
SW: Why did you wait so long?
CC: I was a nerd and no one wanted to fuck me. Yeah, I was a nerdy good girl and no one wanted to fuck me. Everyone thought I would like, I don’t know, not be able to do it. I have no idea. I ended up having sex for the first time with one of my store managers at the party city I was working for at the time. It was one of the only times I ever broke my parents’ rules about going out. I told them I was gonna go to a friend’s house after work, we were gonna hang out, grab a bite to eat, and that was it. I’d be home, you know, by midnight. I went to a house party. It was a high school house party. I went with my manager. I remember looking around, it was like the first high school party I’d ever been to. I was just like, wow, oh my God, there’s so much going on. Danced a little bit. Then we went back to his house and with his grandmother on the couch and his mom in the other room, we did the deed. It lasted maybe three to five minutes at most. That was the first time I gave head too, and I was terrible at it. I remember afterwards thinking, that was it? This is what everybody’s talking about. This was the whole big secret. Well, I don’t get it. I hadn’t had an orgasm until a couple months later when I had a high school boyfriend and we then fucked in his car and I was like, oh, I get this now, I get it, I get it. There’s a whole thing that happens at the end of it. That was kind of like the turning point for me where I was like, oh, I really like this. This is gonna be fun.
SW: You do it the first time. Are you really trying to initiate it? Is he trying to get in your pants? How does all that work?
CC: He was definitely trying to get into my pants. They used to call him the rabbit because he would just hop on anything. And he really enjoyed taking the virginity of different girls. That was his that was kink. I didn’t know about it. I kind of got my heart broken because I did really like him. I just remember afterwards just crying and crying and not understanding why I wasn’t good enough or whatever. I actually looked back to that and I’m like, wow, I was just so, so young, so dumb, so full of cum.
SW: You have sex the first time, do you immediately become sexually active or do you wait before you do it again?
CC: I was a little bit traumatized because he you know, he did one of those one and done rip and dips on me. I ended up dating someone shortly after, maybe a month after, it was like a high school relationship. So I didn’t last very long at all and we fucked and it wasn’t anything to write home about either. Then we broke up. I kind of had this feeling of like, at that point, I don’t get what the big hype is. Got into another relationship and it was like one of my first real relationships, it lasted a couple of months in high school, which is forever. We started fucking regularly and I was like, oh, I get it now, this is better. But it took me maybe four months before I started fucking regularly again.
SW: Were you a hit and run type of girl where you saw a boy and you said, I want him. You boned him and dumped him.
CC: No, I’ve always been the relationship type. I’ve always been wifey material. It’s only more recently that I’m like, I can hit it and quit it. You know, we can just make this a fun thing, a casual thing. Um, but when I first started, I mean, I think I’ve had, still at 35, I can count on one hand, the amount of serious relationships I’ve had. And that’s because they’ve lasted so long. We’re talking five, 10 years, two years here, two years there, that’s all of them.
SW: When you’re in one of these relationships, is monogamy a must? Are you still having sexual other boys or men or?
CC: Now that I’m in the industry, it’s up for discussion. I prefer when you say monogamy, when you say monogamous, people think that, okay, well, you’re not fucking anyone else. Even on set. I don’t count work as fucking at all. That’s work. To me, that’s a whole different thing. And it’s not cheating to me. So there has to be a conversation about it. There has to be, you know, what’s comfortable for you, what’s comfortable for me. I’m also the type that I enjoy getting slutted out every now and again. So if they’re cool with it, I was in a relationship with somebody who enjoyed watching me get pleasured. If that meant me getting pleasured by someone else, and then he comes in, that was fine with him. So he set it up a few times where, you know, at the end of the day, another performer would show up and I’d be like, why is there two of you here? Okay, we’re gonna have some fun. I would do the same. I would bring some of the girls that I’m cool with in the industry and things would get a little out of hand. So for me, it’s more about a conversation and figuring out what people are comfortable with. These days, I feel like relationships can go from open to closed and back and forth, depending on the needs of the couple. Personally, these days I’m a little more open just cause I recently got out of a relationship. So for me, I’m on the prowl, let’s have some fun. Down to clown. But I try, like I know I’m in the adult industry, I’m not trying to have a relationship with someone in the adult industry ever again. Just cause you work together and In my case, things ended very amicably and we’re still very good friends. But I don’t know if that’ll always be the case with anybody else. So rather than deal with, you know, having to see someone that you don’t necessarily want to see at every function and event, and let’s face it, there’s like 30 events every year. So I, you know, I would rather date outside of the industry. Also, there’s a lot that comes with dating in the industry that most people don’t realize guys can only pop so many times. You know, you end up having sex on camera more than you do intimately. That’s a whole other can of worms that I don’t know if I’m ready or willing to go back into.
SW: Being in his business though, does sex have to be a big part of your relationship out of it.
CC: You know what? It still is. It still is. Because it’s not so much about the sex, it’s about the intimacy. So it’s about the cuddles, it’s about the aftercare. Yes, there are times where I want to have sex off camera. I don’t want to have to think about where’s the camera? Am I opening up to the camera? How’s the lighting? How’s my hair? Do I look stupid? Like no, I want to roll over in the morning and just on it, you know, and not have to worry about did we catch the pop shot? So sex is still important. I think that again, between two people who are in a relationship, your on-camera persona is an exaggeration of yourself. It’s not always you authentically, especially if you’re playing for a company. I think having that intimacy where there are no cameras and that you still have that intimacy, I think that’s really important, at least for me.
SW: How easy, difficult is it for you to have a relationship with a civilian?
CC: Oh, I don’t know. I haven’t had one yet. So I have no idea. They’d have to be incredibly secure with themselves and their place in my life. It is also my responsibility as their partner to make them feel secure with their place in my life. What I hear from other performers is one of the biggest hurdles is, you know, somewhat a civilian thinking that because we are porn stars that that’s all we want to do is fuck. That’s not true at all. If I come home from a particularly rough day on set, I’m going to just want cuddles and food. If you just make sure that there’s food there and cuddles, you know, you’ll get a surprise dick sucking at another time. I’m not necessarily down to clown right then and there. And again, that’s where the intimacy comes in. And I hear from a lot of people that from that when dating civilians, that could be an issue. I’ll let you know if it is, we’ll see. I feel like even though I just came out of a relationship, I’m still not ready to commit to a relationship, but I am open towards the idea of casually dating. So I’ll let you know.
SW: We call most of those guys Mr. “Right Now”, instead of Mr. Right. All joking aside, if you met Mr. Right, would you give all of this up for him?
CC: Mr. Right would never ask me to give this up. He would say, babe, go do you, do your thing. Let’s keep communication and transparency open. And when you’re ready, Mr. Right will know that he will provide everything that I need for me to want to leave. I have certain goals and things that I would like to achieve before I go or for myself or just for my brand. When I leave, I would need them to be open to me still being behind the camera. I am an insanely independent person. So when I retire, that doesn’t mean I’m not working. I’m just probably not filming in front of the camera, or if I am, I’m being highly selective, maybe only working with women and only doing content. At that point, I would assume that I would have started my own company and I would be competing with the other companies. So I think that Mr. Right would never ask me to give up something that has given me so much independence, so much freedom, so much personal autonomy, which is something that you can’t buy. Being able to create your own schedule and work with people you want and travel and so forth, that’s not something that comes easily. The right person’s not going to ask me to leave that. The right person would provide an environment where I feel like I don’t need to do that in order to feel fulfilled or independent or this or that. They may even want to build something with me, something outside of adult. I would be open to that.
SW: You mentioned goals. Have you given yourself a, I want to be in the business five years, or I want to be in this magazine. I want to be at this company. Want to win this award.
CC: Yes, absolutely. I’ve given myself a lot of those, but at the end of the day, I can’t boohoo or expect that it’s going to happen. Certainly not overnight. A lot of the things I want to accomplish require some time, a lot of energy, a lot of effort, a lot of reinvestment. And some of it is about paying your dues. A lot of those awards I’ve noticed is about paying your dues. It’s about having been in the industry for a while and creating a relationship with a lot of the companies and other people in the industry that is a brand of value. Again, not showing up to set drunk or tired or unwilling to perform the basic tasks that you’re asked to do. Those are some things, just some examples that you can make sure as a talent that you are a reliable talent. I think that’s what some of it is. I’ve just been trucking along trying to get to them. And if I achieve them, amazing. If I don’t, also amazing. Cause I know I came out here and I built something from nothing. That’s more than most people can say about their entire lives.
SW: How much do you put into politics and everything playing into winning awards and doing all that?
CC: It’s definitely politics. There’s a lot of politics afoot. It’s so much so that I’m just realizing now how much politics goes into play with this. And as I get further into the industry, I see it more and more. But again, if you do the work, you do well in what you do, you’ll be recognized for it because the fans are going to recognize you for it. My fans are what keep me motivated a lot of the times. Hearing from a couple that, you know, I helped out their marriage in some odd way, because that was a very odd conversation. You know, that’s what gives me meaning and purpose. When I have fans that say, hey, you know, I’ve been seeing how hard you’ve been going in the gym and really just getting your health together. And I’m not sure why you’re doing it, but I admire it. Or I admire that you didn’t just take the easy way out and get surgery or whatever. You’ve inspired me to get back into the gym. That to me is worth more than any award. I made someone healthier, happier in some way. That to me is honestly worth a lot more. So are there politics that play into it? Yes. Do those politics really matter at the end of the day? Not really.
SW: what’s the reality of this business versus what people think it is?
CC: This is a business. This is a job like anything else. You clock in, you clock out. It just so happens that the clocking out bleeds into your regular life. At the end of the day, I’m still human. I’m still a person. I still have, you know, my own issues and things I have to work on and my own life that I need to maintain. I think a lot of people forget that we’re not just these sex dolls who wake up like, ooh, suck my dick. You know, that’s not us 100% of the time. I think that’s the biggest misconception. Also that most people assume that we’re bimbos, that we aren’t business savvy, that we’ve thrown away our lives or that some sort of our value is diminished because of what we do. Nothing can be further from the truth. Some of the best people I know, some of the most cunning business people I know are in this industry, some of the best parents I know are in this industry, some of the most normal people I know are in this industry. So I think the biggest misconception is that we’re different, so different. Yes, we’re sexual athletes. I will give you that. We are sexual athletes. But that doesn’t mean that we’re any different from the average person.
SW: Anything you want to say to all of your fans?
CC: I love you guys. Thank you for making my dreams come true. I’m gonna keep cuming for you.
SW: Where can people find all things Carmela Clutch?
CC: Easiest thing to do is to go to:
https://linktr.ee/carmela_clutch
everything is there.
Thank you Carmela.
Follow us on twitter: @emmreport, instagram @emmreport, tiktok@emmreport