Kait uses a pseudo-name and avoids revealing her exact NFL/NBA team. She films OnlyFans content in plain clothes (leotards, not official uniforms) to avoid copyright/trademark violation. However, her Instagram still links to a Linktree with OF. In late 2024, one of her TikToks was removed for “sexual solicitation.” Her response video: “I’m just a cheerleader trying to live. Men post shirtless workouts fine.”
Kait’s TikTok content features behind-the-scenes cheer prep: stretching in uniform, locker-room banter, game-day makeup tutorials. These videos are PG-13 but sexually suggestive (low-angle shots, lip-biting). The caption often reads: “Full routine on my OF 💙.” This creates a direct funnel: wholesome entertainment → curiosity → paid adult content. The uniform acts as a “brand trademark” that OnlyFans cannot legally replicate but can allude to.
The Digital Field of Play: Navigating Career Ambiguity, Content Labor, and Brand Identity on OnlyFans and Social Media Onlyfans - Cheerleader Kait And Lena The Plug -...
The convergence of traditional sports entertainment (cheerleading) and digital sex work (OnlyFans) represents a new frontier in the gig economy. This paper examines the case study of “Kait,” a pseudonymous creator who identifies as an “OnlyFans Cheerleader.” By analyzing her cross-platform content strategy (TikTok, Instagram, and OnlyFans), this paper explores how Kait navigates career sustainability, algorithmic censorship, and brand parasociality. Findings suggest that cheerleading functions as a “respectability shield” for adult content, while OnlyFans serves as a financial hedge against the precarious, underpaid labor of professional cheerleading. The paper concludes that Kait’s career model exemplifies the post-Fordist worker: self-branded, multi-platform, and constantly negotiating moral panics for economic survival.
The “OnlyFans Cheerleader” like Kait is not an anomaly but an early signal of how traditional entertainment jobs will coexist with direct-to-fan adult content. As long as cheerleading remains undercompensated and over-exposed, workers will seek alternative revenue streams. Future research should examine whether NFL/NBA franchises will adapt (e.g., allowing OF as long as uniforms are not used) or continue terminating cheerleaders, pushing the industry further underground. Kait uses a pseudo-name and avoids revealing her
A Case Study of “Kait the Cheerleader”
In 2024-2025, the phrase “OnlyFans Cheerleader” has become a recognizable subgenre of digital creator. Among these, the persona known as “Kait” (social handles typically variations of @kaitcheer or @kait_only) has garnered attention for explicitly linking her NFL/NBA cheerleader aesthetic with exclusive adult content. This paper argues that Kait’s career is not a deviation from cheerleading but rather an extension of its core economic logic: the commodification of the female body, performance of desirability, and monetization of access. In late 2024, one of her TikToks was
Cheerleaders have historically been underpaid (often earning less than minimum wage per game) while generating millions in brand value for sports franchises. Kait’s pivot to OnlyFans represents a rational economic response to this exploitation. However, it also creates complex career risks, including termination from traditional cheer squads (which enforce morality clauses) and algorithmic shadow-banning on mainstream social media.
Based on leaked data from similar accounts, Kait likely earns $8,000–$20,000/month on OnlyFans, compared to $400–$800/month from cheerleading. In a podcast clip, “Kait” stated: “I love cheering, but it doesn’t pay rent. My OF lets me cheer without a second job at Starbucks.” This reframes sex work not as a fallback but as a career enabler.