Fans of Camille Winbush on OnlyFans are well aware that she is far from the young actress who played Bernie Mac’s daughter, and now she is responding to those who disparage her new role.
The 34-year-old former child star won three NAACP Image Awards and a Young Artist Award for her portrayal of Vanessa “Nessa” Thomkins, the oldest of the three children in creator Larry Wilmore’s sitcom about the late great comedian.
The sitcom ran on Fox for five seasons from 2001 to 2006.
Camille told Comedy Hype in an interview last Friday that; “People often comment, ‘Oh, those Bernie Mac checks must have dried up’ to which I respond, ‘From a job 20 years ago when I was 12 years old? Yes. Like, obviously.’ Listen, those residual checks would still be quite wonderful if I were on Friends and made a million dollars every episode. However, they get progressively smaller with each passing year. You’re not getting paid as much per episode as you did while the show was running. Those checks are no longer sufficient to support a life after 20 years.
Camille Winbush went on, “You can’t count on any job to last or even to book a job, with the industry being as fickle as it is. I have therefore worked regular nine to fives over the years. During my adolescent years, I funded my own three years of ownership of Baked Ice, an ice cream shop. I was earning between $11 and $12 per hour teaching gymnastics to children. I’ve already done that, but why wouldn’t I do it if I could make enough money from the comfort and security of my own living room to purchase a house?”
The Los Angeles native’s ‘CandidlyCam‘ account on the Fenix International-owned XXX site, which charges a 20% commission on all of her profits, has a ‘no nudity’ rule.
Along with that, Camille Winbush says she will send a personal thank you to everyone who buys anything from her connected Amazon Wish List, which includes lingerie, sultry costumes, a $161 Diptyque scented candle set, and multiple gift cards ranging from $25 to $105 in value.
Though her parents and friends supported her decision, Winbush questioned why her content wasn’t seen similarly to an actor playing a stripper or acting out a simulated sex scene:
“Since the material would be the same, I find myself wondering if the problem is with the platform or the content itself. I would say my content is comparable to what you would see in a Maxim magazine—it’s not even really Playboy. Yes, occasionally I dance about in only my underwear, but I’m never completely nude. I’m not engaging in any explicit sexual activity. Really, there’s a lot more on Twitter, Instagram, and runways than what I’m showcasing. Therefore, it’s not as scandalous as people think”.