I have been in the adult content industry since the early 2000’s. Long enough to have watched platforms come and go, payment processors get squirrely, content trends cycle through, and the entire creator economy reframe what running an adult business looks like. The work has stayed the same throughout: figure out what works, do it consistently, and don’t waste time on advice that doesn’t survive contact with real production.
I’m currently producing content weekly across NiteFlirt, Clips4Sale, OnlyFans, and other platforms (audio, video, photos), and I’ve been on the top lists of several of those platforms over the years. Fetish Scripts is where I share the writing, scripts, workflows, and resources that come out of that work.
What I write about
Five focus areas, all built around what actually works in production:
- Script writing for creators. Story structure, pacing, character development, niche-specific scripting, and writing content that performs.
- Content creation workflows. Batching, production, editing, file management, and the systems that make creator life sustainable.
- Industry insights. Platform changes, payment processors, marketing shifts, and the business realities most creator advice skips over.
- Creator resources and tools. Cameras, lighting, editing software, scheduling tools, and the gear that earns its place.
- Scripts and digital products. Audio scripts, video scripts, marketing playbooks, ebooks, and other resources, sold through the platforms where I host them.
Who I write for
Adult content creators at every stage. Newer creators trying to figure out what actually works. Experienced creators looking to tighten up workflows or find new revenue angles. Script writers who need source material that’s been tested in actual production. The common thread is people who treat this work as a real business and want resources written by someone who does the same.
What’s on offer
The blog is free. The shop sells my own digital products: audio scripts, video scripts, ebooks, marketing playbooks, and creator resources. Each product link points out to whichever platform that product lives on (NiteFlirt, Etsy, or a direct download host, depending on the product). I don’t run third-party affiliate programs and I don’t have Amazon Associates links scattered through posts. What you see is what I made and what I use.
Sister site
If you’re newer to the industry and looking for an entry-level guide rather than working-creator resources, my sister site How To Become a Dominatrix covers that territory. Same author, different scope.
