A former nurse says she was forced to start a risky but high-paying job – after discovering her boyfriend had a secret family that she had been paying for.
Dara, 37, from Brooklyn in New York, regularly shares sexy snaps with her 271,000 followers on Instagram.
WATCH THE VIDEO ABOVE: Dara joined OnlyFans after learning boyfriend had secret family
For more Relationships related news and videos check out Relationships >>
But the pursuit morphed into her joining OnlyFans, and she now makes more than 16 times what she previously earned as a newborn intensive care unit nurse.
Dara needed the money after finding out her partner had another, secret girlfriend – who was eight months pregnant.
Even more shockingly, she claims her ex had been using her money to cover his budding family’s expenses.
In June 2019, Dara was working as a NICU nurse.
Although living pay to pay, she was also supporting her boyfriend – even agreeing to move across the US to live with him.
A month after moving to the Big Apple, Dara uncovered the truth about her boyfriend.
Not only did he have a heavily pregnant girlfriend, but Dara was financing them both.
“I found out through Facebook,” she told JamPrime.com.
“We were about to go and meet his mum, who lives abroad, and I went to follow her and noticed she was ‘friends’ with a profile of his that I didn’t know about.
“When I clicked on this alternative profile, I saw photos from a baby shower for his other girlfriend.
“I was so shocked, hurt and angry.”
Stuck in a lease in a swanky New York flat, Dara ditched her boyfriend.
But she soon found herself struggling to pay her bills.
Looking for new ways to make ends meet – and wanting to show her ex what he was missing – she decided to try OnlyFans, launching her account in 2018.
Within her first month, she made $US30,000 ($A43,100) – the equivalent of her yearly nursing salary.
Now, she makes more than $A722,500 per year – and it’s all thanks to her cheating ex.
“I have a lot of pride and decided to just figure my financial situation out, rather than let a man take advantage of me,” Dara said.
“When I fell into debt, I ditched him, then got rid of my car, which was a money guzzler, and started an OnlyFans.
“The rest is history.”
In the beginning, she mostly posted behind-the-scenes images from photo shoots, but she couldn’t believe how much money was coming in.
“I remember thinking ‘I’m going to post whatever makes me as much money as possible’ and now I’m debt-free,” she said.
“For the first time, I can actually save money.”
Dara’s new job means she has turned her back on 13 years in health care but she has not looked back.
“I don’t plan to return to nursing as long as I keep making good money,” she said.
“I loved watching my patients grow and go home.
“But the job started to take a toll on my mental health.
“Being a nurse is emotionally taxing when you work in the intensive care unit, and I wasn’t making enough to make ends meet.
“I don’t regret my decision.”
As for her former partner, Dara reveals he still tries to contact her and he knows about her OnlyFans career.
She said: “He still contacts me to this day but I’ve blocked him.
“I want nothing to do with him.”
For more engaging lifestyle content, visit 7Life on Facebook.
An author who gained fame for writing a book about the Duchess of Sussex and her time in the royal family is set to release his second work.
Omid Scobie shared the news on Twitterrevealing he could “finally share” details – but he refrained from announcing exactly what the book would be about.
Publishers say the forthcoming book will focus on a “new chapter of the royal story.”
The yet-to-be named book is due for release in 2023, two years after the publishing of Finding Freedomwhich he co-authored with Carolyn Durand.
READMORE:Duchess of Cambridge helps Team GB claim victory in sailing
The news has prompted Scobie could focus his second book on Meghan, due to the reported speculation close working relationship he has with the duchess.
FindingFreedom, to bestseller, was sympathetic towards Meghansparking speculation she collaborated with its authors – something the duchess’s team denied when it was published in 2020.
But in 2022 the couple’s former communications secretary, Jason Knauf, testified in a London court that he gave the writers information and discussed it with Harry and Meghan.
In response, Meghan apologized for misleading the court about the extent of her cooperation with Scobie and Durand.
Publisher Dey Street said Scobie’s new book will focus “on a new chapter of the royal story and feature unique insight, deep access, and exclusive revelations.”
READMORE:The 10 most controversial, and thought-provoking, royal books
Some reports are suggesting the book could counter claims made by Tom Bower in his book, revenge.
Bower paints a scathing picture of Meghan and Prince Harry, and their rift with the Windsors.
It includes a number of allegations about Meghanincluding that she rejected a suggestion by the Queen and the Prince of Wales that she fly to the US to reconcile with her father months after the royal wedding.
Bower says Prince Harry “inflamed emotions by repeatedly drawing comparisons between his wife and Diana,” adding, “The more Harry drew parallels with his mother, the more Meghan must have been convinced of her importance to the monarchy.”
Later this year the Duke of Sussex is set to release his memoirs, due out by Christmas.
For a daily dose of 9Honey,subscribe to our newsletter here.
Woolworths has released a new ultra rare Fix-Em for fans to collect – and it just might make you a fortune.
The Infinity Gauntlet, a favorite for fans of Disney’s Marvel franchise, is a special extra Woolies Fix-Em that has been in circulation.
Woolworths has released just 200 of this exclusive Fix-Em in stores across Australia.
For more Lifestyle related news and videos check out Lifestyle >>
But with the promotion due to end on August 9 – or while stocks last – fans have a short amount of time to score an Infinity Gauntlet for their collection.
“Since launching Fix-Ems earlier this month, we’ve been inspired and impressed by the creativity of our customers who are giving their everyday belongings a bit of extra flair with Fix-Ems,” Woolworths Senior Manager Continuity and Collectibles Paul Stibbard said.
“As we begin to see many customers complete their collection, there are still dozens of ultra rare Fix-Ems in circulation waiting to be collected.
“We encourage collectors to double check their collection in case they have unknowingly already collected the ultra rare Infinity Gauntlet, and look forward to seeing even more creative ways our customers are using their Fix-Ems.”
In past supermarket promotions, fans have paid tens of thousands of dollars for ultra rare collectables.
One fan bid $100k for an ultra rare Furry Simba Ooshie during Woolworths’ 2019 Lion King Ooshie promotion.
In 2020, another ultra rare furry The Child Disney+ Ooshie also sold for $100k.
Other rare collectables have sold for tens of thousands of dollars on eBay and other buy, swap and sell sites.
Woolies shoppers can collect Disney, Pixar, Marvel and Star Wars Fix-Ems when they spent $30 in store on online*.
New to the Australian market, Fix-Ems are reusable woven patches that can be adhered to a vast range of surfaces or permanently ironed onto some fabrics for a longer lasting design.
The Fix-Ems, created in partnership with Disney, are made from at least 80 percent recycled material and Good Environmental Choice Australia (GECA) certified.
Woolworths Fix-Ems are available to collect in stores and online until Tuesday 9 August, or while stock lasts.
* For full Fix-Ems Terms and Conditions, head here.
Hunter Moore is a 36-year-old convicted criminal who was born and raised in Woodland, California. Per The New Yorkerhe was expelled from his school during his adolescence.
In 2010, he started a website named isanyoneup.com which he claimed was intended to cover nightlife culture. But things changed when he and his friends received explicit images of the woman they were dating. Moore began uploading some of these images to the site along with links to the women’s social media profiles, though these women claimed that they had never consented to their images being used, with some even claiming the photos had been hacked from their personal computers, per rolling Stone. The publication coined Moore as ‘The most hated man on the internet’.
At the height of its infamy, Moore claimed the site was garnering more than 30 million page views monthly, but it would soon come crashing down.
Was Hunter Moore convicted?
Moore was at the center of an FBI investigation when Charlotte Laws, the mother of a woman whose images were posted to the website, compiled evidence from more than 40 other victims. She gave her research to the FBI, and in 2014, Moore was indicted in a federal court in California on charges of conspiracy, unauthorized access to a protected computer.
He was released on a $100,000 bond two days later, but a year later iIn 2015, I pleaded guilty to aggravated identity theft and aiding and abetting in the unauthorized access of a computer.
He was sentenced to two and a half years in federal prison, followed by three years of supervised release. He was also ordered to undergo a mental health evaluation while he was in prison along with a $2000 fine and a restitution fee of $145.70.
Charlotte Laws in ‘The Most Hated Man On The Internet’.
Netflix
Where is Hunter Moore now?
Moore was released from prison in 2017 and has since kept his movements largely under the radar. He was also banned from Facebook after his crimes were revealed, though he had an active Twitter account until recently. It appears the account has now been suspended by the social media giant.
Per good to know, Moore posted predominantly images from the gym and of his dog. I have also Tweeted in 2021, “You know my name not my story. You’ve heard what I’ve done, Not what I’ve been through.”
In 2022, he Tweeted: “Look guys, I did my time behind bars. Living my life peacefully now, it’s been a decade about what happened. Some of you loves me, most of you hates me, if you want me to apologize well I wouldn’t. I don’t owe anyone anything.”
What happened to isanyoneup.com?
IsAnyoneUp.com was taken down in 2012 and was redirected to an anti-bullying website belonging to activist James McGibney. The site is now McGibney’s personal web page.
In her 51 years, My Unorthodox Life star Julia Haart has lived a big life. But for the majority of her years, she had no control over her de ella—what she ate, what she thought, what she wore and what she was allowed to do in a day was regulated by a strict religious code.
After emigrating from Russia to America with her family, Julia’s parents settled in Monsey, New York. They soon decided to join an ultra-Orthodox Jewish community in Monsey that practiced Haredi Judaism – a branch of Judaism known for its religious conservatism and social seclusion.
From a very young age to her early 40s, Julia was part of this community. And initially, it was something she was comfortable with.
While she loved being Jewish, it was the fundamentalist lifestyle that Julia couldn’t accept – a world where she says little boys were taught to thank God every morning “for not making me a woman.”
When we think about New York, visions of Sex and the City, progressive politics and a 21st Century life come to mind. But in Monsey, particularly the community Julia was a part of, this was far from reality.
“Go back a couple of hundred years and the life women lived in the 1800s is exactly the life I lived in Monsey. Women are not educated, they’re married off and they’re told they are inferior to men,” Julia said to Mia Freedman on Mamamia‘s No Filter.
Listen to No Filter with Julia Haart. Post continues after audio.
She was taught that all non-Jewish people or irreligious Jewish people were dangerous. Her community of her and its people of her were the ‘chosen ones’. Everyone else was not. And ever so slowly, her world was shrinking-and so was her autonomy, particularly due to her gender.
From a young age, Julia was taught that if any part of her body was uncovered in public, she would go to a “special kind of hell” reserved for just her and her mother. It was a confronting ‘cautionary tale’ to have drummed into you as a child.
“That’s the danger of when people are taking away rights – you don’t even realize because it’s so gradual. It started with, ‘okay Julia we’re going to keep kosher’. That very basically means you can’t eat at your friend’s houses anymore and can only eat certain foods, and have to eat in a certain way. Then it was ‘okay Julia, you can’t wear shorts anymore’. ‘You can’t dance in public anymore’. cover yourself head to toe’. And before you realise, your world has shrunk.”
By the age of 19, she was forced into an arranged marriage. Her first husband was Yosef Hendler, and together they had four children. She practically knew nothing about him prior to walking down the aisle. Julia also never had access to a proper education – the thought among the community was simply: “why do you need to educate women if their only purpose is to do what their husband says and have babies?”
Love Island Australia’s Kim Hartnett has confirmed she’s welcomed a healthy baby boy with Bachelor in Paradise star Matt Whyatt.
The couple unveiled the news on their Instagram pages on Sunday, where they also revealed the tot’s adorable name.
“Chase James Whyatt,” the pair wrote alongside photos from the hospital. “You are perfect 👶🏼. Mum & Dad love you so much.”
Stream every episode of Love Island Australia for free on 9Now.
Love Island stars were quick to comment on the cute announcement, with Shelby Bilby writing: “He is beautiful, can’t wait to meet him!”
“Guys he is perfect!” Anna McEvoy added, while Married At First Sight’s Jessika Power wrote: “Congrats guys!”
Matt later took to his Instagram stories to share an update on the little one’s arrival, writing: “Here is my thank you to everyone for all the comments and messages.
“We are so over the moon with our little family. I’m 36 hours no sleep so going to try to get some rest tonight even though I just want to stay up with little man all night haha.”
He later shared a close-up of the tot asleep in his bed, captioned: “Full head of hair just like his dad now!”
Kim, 26, also has a six-year-old son, Braxton, from a previous relationship.
Matt also posted a sweet photo of the young boy meeting the little tot for the first time, captioned: “Braxton got to meet his brother today.
“He is going to be the best big brother.”
READMORE:Love Island Australia winner Anna McEvoy debuts new boyfriend
Kim only recently announced that she was expecting her second child.
Last month, she took to Instagram to share a photo of a positive pregnancy test.
“Can’t believe we get to meet you in only eight weeks. Mum, dad and your big brother are all here waiting for you to come change our world for ever,” she wrote.
Kim and Matt, a BMX rider for the Nitro Circus, went public with their relationship in August 2020.
READMORE:Where are the Islanders from Love Island Australia Season 1 now?
She confirmed their romance after posting a vlog to her YouTube channel title, ‘New Boyfriend’.
It included footage of the couple’s romantic trip to Queensland’s Magnetic Island.
Kim found fame on Season 1 of Love Island Australia in 2018.
Matt appeared on The Bachelorette and later went on to star on Bachelor in Paradise.
In Pictures
Where the Islanders from Love Island Australia Season 2 are now
Anna McEvoy wows fans in holiday snaps.
ViewGallery
Stream every episode ever ofLove IslandUKandLove Island Australiafor free on 9Now.
A royal biographer has made a wild claim that Prince Harry married Meghan Markle “as an alternative to his mother” Princess Diana.
During Sunday’s episode of GB News’ Real Britain with Darren Grimesavailable to stream on Flash, author Angela Levin weighed on newly released book Revenge: Meghan, Harry And The War Between The Windsors.
The latest royal book written by Tom Bower has caused an uproar, criticizing the Duchess of Sussex on numerous occasions.
Stay up to date with the latest news on the British Royals with Flash. 25+ news channels in 1 place. New to Flash? Try 1 month free. Offer ends October 31, 2022 >
Levin was asked if she thinks the former Suits actress is the victim of a media witch hunt.
“I don’t think it’s a witch hunt. We all loved her when we arrived, we were all thrilled Harry found someone to love and who loved him,” she said on the program
“I was one of the presenters of the wedding and I watched her with hawk eyes for 10 hours and I was thrilled to bits she joined the Royal Family.
“However, since then she’s rejected us very firmly.
“She’s rejected the country, it’s too small and she wants to talk globally.
“She’s rejected our Royal Family who most of us love and respect and I think she’s made a very difficult place for herself.
“One of the problems that I think is one of the causes is that Harry sees as an alternative to his mother and that she’s more like Diana than he could have possibly wished for.”
Princess Diana died in a car crash in Paris in 1997.
Twitter users were quick to hit back at Levin over her comments.
“Where does this woman dream up this nonsense…?!?!?,” one person wrote.
“Lord have mercy on this woman. They’re more issues in the world right now than H&M. Move on Angela,” another said.
“Meghan bashing on steroids there Angela. Leave this couple alone,” a third person wrote.
“He chose who he wanted to marry. You are not a happiness or marriage expert and should stop attacking Meghan.
“Well if not for Meghan some of us would never know you.”
Angelina Jolie’s 17-year-old daughter, Zahara, is set to start her first year at the esteemed US university Spelman College.
The actress, 47, posted an Instagram photo on Sunday of “Zahara with her Spelman sisters”.
The teenager was all smiles posing for the picture in a white tee and jeans, Page Six reported.
“Congratulations to all new students starting this year,” Jolie captioned the social media upload. “A very special place and an honor to have a family member as a new Spelman girl.”
Spelman, which was founded in 1881, is a “historically black college and a global leader in the education of women of African descent”, according to the private school’s website.
Jolie, who is also the mother of Maddox, 20, Pax, 18, Shiloh, 16, and twins Knox and Vivienne, 14, similarly documented her eldest son’s experience when he enrolled at Yonsei University in South Korea in August 2019.
“He has been studying Korean language,” the Oscar winner explained to People of Maddox’s decision at the time. “He has lessons multiple times a week to prepare.”
Jolie told the magazine four months prior that she was “nothing but proud” of Maddox, adding: “I look forward to all he will do.”
When the Maleficent star dropped her and ex-husband Brad Pitt’s son off at Yonsei, she was filmed telling other students that she was “trying not to cry”.
Pitt, 58, was absent at the drop-off, with Maddox telling a reporter the following month that he did not know whether his dad planned to visit.
“Well, whatever happens, happens,” he said in September 2019 amid their strained relationship.
Jolie and her Mr. and Mrs. Smith co-star called it quits in September 2016.
While they were declared legally single nearly three years later, the former couple’s legal battle is still ongoing.
Pitt was granted joint custody of their minor children in May 2021.
Judge Judge John Ouderkirk, however, was subsequently disqualified from the case for not sufficiently disclosing business relationships with Pitt’s attorneys, so the exes are still fighting for custody.
This story originally appeared on Page Six and has been reproduced with permission
Three million viewers tuned in to say goodbye to Ramsay Street as Neighbors came to a close after almost four decades of constant drama.
The final episode of the Australian soap aired on Friday night in the UK on Channel 5, with stars including Kylie Minogue, Guy Pearce and Margot Robbie making one last appearance on the show that brought them fame.
Marking the end of an era, the double-episode special drew in a peak audience of 3 million as the show drew to a close, according to overnight figures.
It attracted an average audience of 2.5 million, and Channel 5 said the viewing figures on Friday night were the highest since it began broadcasting the beloved show in 2008.
Alongside Minogue, the finale also saw the return of three singers who went on to have chart hits after leaving Erinsborough. Delta Goodrem, who played Nina Tucker; Natalie Imbruglia, who was Beth Brennan, and Holly Valance, who played Felicity Scully, all appeared in the Friday night episode.
Mike Young, played by Guy Pearce, returned to Ramsay Street to give his relationship with his former love interest Jane Harris, played by Annie Jones, another shot. The pair shared a video reflecting on the reunion after the episode aired, with Jones saying: “It’s kind of a bit weird, isn’t it?”
Pearce agreed, describing the meeting as “sort of surreal.” “It’s lovely working together again. I mean we’ve stayed friends over the years and it’s sort of surreal and also very familiar and like it was just yesterday in a way”. He added that he thought the fans “might be having a little quiet smile to themselves” after seeing the pair get their happy ending together at last.
Ben Frow, the chief content officer of Paramount UK, said: “I suspect there wasn’t a dry eye from the viewers as Neighbors bowed out on a high last night.
“We wanted to give it a fitting, respectful ending and I hope our night devoted to Neighbors achieved that.
“Last night truly is the end of an era. The response from viewers overnight has been very moving, even if they wished the ending didn’t have to come.”
He added that he hoped fans enjoyed the finale. “We celebrate the success of Neighbours’ 37 years at the top – I’m sure it will remain in people’s hearts and TV memories for a long time to come,” Frow said.
Occupation Cleric, broadcaster, writer and Communard (retired)
voting record Always Labour. “I was a party member for a while. I rejoined to vote for Keir; I rather like Keir”
amuse bouche Richard skydives. On his first tandem freefall, jumping from a plane at 10,000ft, he asked the instructor what was the worst thing that could happen. “He said: ‘Fuck it up completely and kill us both!’”
voting record Lib Dem. “To begin with it was because I liked the Oxford MP Evan Harris, one of the few scientists in parliament, and very intelligent. In recent elections I have just been passionately anti-Brexit”
amuse bouche Richard plays the EWI (pronounced ee-wee), which stands for electronic wind instrument. “It looks like a clarinet, but can sound like anything that has been programmed into it – trumpet, tuba, cello, accordion, panpipes”
For starters
CR I grew up in a world of Christian values; I was a chorister as a kid.
DR I was too.
CR I was singing the music of the Anglican choral tradition.
DR As was I.
CR But I was an atheist from the age of eight, unshakably certain that the universe was a material phenomenon.
DR That is unusual in an eight-year-old. What led you to that?
CR My grandfather’s death. I remember hearing people say well-intentioned phrases about him having gone to a better place, but I couldn’t get past the idea of him decomposing in a grave – it just seemed to me that was what was going on.
DR Do you think he is in a better place now?
CR Yes, as well as decomposing. Once I got to the other side of accepting faith then all sorts of possibilities opened up. The idea that we can endure in some way after the death of our material selves – I find that captivating.
DR Captivating, but is it realistic? The brain has come into existence as a result of millions of years of evolution, presumably acquiring what we think of as consciousness. Why would you think that something that has come into being through evolution goes on when the brain decays?
The big beef
CR At the end of my 20s, HIV took out about a third of my circle. I wanted to connect with that feeling from when I was a kid of being in chapel and loving the music.
DR Your conversion to Christianity came about because of HIV deaths?
CR That’s what got me through the door: the turmoil and devastation and thinking: where do I go with this?
DR You needed somewhere to go and the material world didn’t provide the consolation you needed, so you became a believer.
CR I suppose I did get consolation, but much more than that it challenged me fundamentally about the world. It was so extraordinarily rich and surprising and counterintuitive. And I started to read the Bible seriously.
DR What about miracles, water into wine, walking on water, things like that? I presume you believe in that.
CR Highly unlikely scenarios, and in my own experience I have never come across something inexplicably supernatural. But accepting the incarnation is the big one. If God does that, God could do anything; that’s the key for me.
DR I can appreciate the message in the same way I can appreciate a novel where I don’t believe in the characters but nevertheless can empathize with them and love them. I don’t understand why you take the gospels seriously because scholars don’t.
CR Plenty of scholars do. The gospels are very complicated, there are all sorts of things going on in them – some of it is eyewitness account, memory, oral tradition; some of it is theological. It’s very challenging sometimes, but it’s worth it because of the fruits, because of the wonderful stuff that continues to captivate me and motivate me.
DR Is the wonderful stuff an aesthetic thing?
CR Some of it, but it’s more about the way it makes people feel fully alive, what it does to people and for people, and I’m sure a Muslim or a Jew or an atheist would be able to give you examples of that according to their own light.
DR I get that every day, from music, and the work that I do in science, from the beautiful world we live in. Part of that beauty is the fact that it is explicable, that what looks overwhelmingly like the artifice of a master creator you can actually explain, starting from simply beginning without the need for intervention from design.
CR We live in a world where Darwin seems to provide such a powerful and elegant and persuasive account of the origins of life. I don’t find anything in that that I would have to surrender in order to make a commitment.
DR You’re the kind of vicar who is much harder to argue with because that’s a reasonable point.
sharing plate
CR I’m fascinated by Mendel, who was in both camps, I guess, in that he was a theologian and an abbot. He exercised pastoral responsibility in his community for him, but he was also an extraordinarily significant person in the development of our understanding of biology. Did you know Janáček played the organ at his funeral?
DR I did not. Have you visited his monastery?
CR I haven’t.
DR I have. The library contains his copy of On the Origin of Species with underlined passages. It’s pretty clear I read it. It also has a remarkable collection of English schoolboy fiction – Percy F Westerman and Biggles.
for afters
DR When I did Desert Island Discs one of the things I chose was Mache Dich, Mein Herze from Bach’s St Matthew Passion. Sue Lawley, who was doing it at the time, couldn’t understand. It’s just sublime music.
CR I suppose I want to light on “sublime” Richard.
DR I don’t know what the dictionary definition is; you’re probably one up on me there. Bach was a genius. When there was some talk about what to send out into space as a sort of advertisement for humanity, one scientist, I forget who, suggested the complete works of Bach, but then said, “but that would be boasting”.
CR Indeed. And on every manuscript I believe Bach wrote “for the greater glory of God.”
Takeaways
CR I think there is this idea in our public discourse that the force of your opinion and the force of your feeling and the passionate adherence to a belief is what validates it, and I don’t think that’s true. I’d much rather talk something through, look at inconsistencies and incongruences.
DR What is difficult to argue with Richard is he is not swayed by factual evidence; he it is feeling that matters. Feelings are important, but they don’t tell us what is true.
The Rev Richard Coles’ Murder Before Evensong is published by Orionat £16.99. To support the Guardian and Observer, order your copy at guardianbookshop.com. Delivery charges may apply. Richard and Richard ate at the Colony Grill, London.
Want to meet someone from across the divide? Find out how to take part