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  "path": "/issues/2026-2-28/snap-crackle-and-bop",
  "publishedAt": "2026-02-28T00:00:00.000Z",
  "site": "https://airmail.news",
  "tags": [
    "Air Mail",
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  "textContent": "  Camilla Araujo, a former member of the so-called Bop House.\n\n##### Upper East Side parents are up in arms over their daughters’ obsession with OnlyFans creators\n\nBy Carson Griffith\n\nFor many, the influencer was the online dream job: build a following, project a picture-perfect life, and wait for the brand contract. But there is a successor now. Meet the “Bop.”\n\nThe Bop uses the same Internet platforms as a mainstream influencer but to a different end. She gathers attention on TikTok and Instagram, then sells intimate access to paying subscribers, mostly on the explicit-content Web site OnlyFans. The public feed is marketing. The private feed is the business.\n\n“Bop” used to mean a catchy song; online, it has become shorthand for a woman monetizing her sexuality. Depending on READ ON",
  "title": "Snap, Crackle, and \"Bop\""
}