What do Clavicular, Jack Doherty, and Camilla Araujo’s boyfriend, Owen Lynch, have in common? They all run OnlyFans management agencies. And they all take a massive cut.
We are not talking about 10% or even 30%. We are talking about 50% to 80% of a creator’s income.
Owen Lynch has openly said he charges no less than 50%. Meanwhile, reports tied to Jack Doherty and Clavicular suggest cuts as high as 70% to 80%.
At first glance, that sounds insane. So why are so many creators agreeing to it? The answer is simple: the drive for success and quick growth.
Most creators they work with are not just chasing money. They are chasing momentum, visibility, and growth. When a large influencer or streamer offers to “blow you up,” it feels like a shortcut.
The pitch usually sounds something like this:
Would you rather have 100% of nothing, or 20% of a million?
On paper, it makes sense. But that logic leaves out one important question: Is that million actually guaranteed? (Or even possible under their guidance)
Despite the branding, most of these agencies are not full-service operations. In many cases:
- Day-to-day messaging and account management is outsourced
- Content strategy is basic or templated and doesn’t always work for everyone
The creator is not paying for full infrastructure. They are primarily paying for marketing and exposure. That is the real product of these celebrity streamer/YouTuber types. And that may not be a bad thing because in the end, marketing is really what makes or breaks a content creator (IF IT’S DONE CORRECTLY).
But let’s look at specifics, so we can see exactly what it is they promise and what they actually do.
Owen Lynch
Owen Lynch is a former YouTuber, now best known as Camilla Araujo’s boyfriend. He focuses heavily on Instagram and TikTok growth. His strategy is built around replicating viral formats that worked for him in the past.
To his credit, he has had success stories, well, two of them, Camilla Araujo (his girlfriend) and her childhood friend Julia Filippo. But what about the other girls he has managed? The results are inconsistent. Some accounts under his system show:
- Millions of followers but extremely low engagement
- Declining follower counts
- Weak conversion signals
That means the strategy does not translate equally across creators. Yet the revenue split remains the same.
If you take a look at Andie Elle’s Instagram, you’ll see some posts have 2,000 likes, and others have 300. Her overall engagement on her main account is 0.09%, with nearly 1.4 million followers. Day after day, she loses hundreds, sometimes more than a 1,000 followers. By all accounts, her main Instagram account is a fail.
Aishah Sofey has a similar problem with her Instagram account. She has 2.9 million followers, but her engagement rate if 0.56% and she’s losing hundreds of followers a day. In the last two weeks, she’s lost more than 15,000 followers. Ouch!
So what we know is his social media techniques don’t exactly work on everyone, but that doesn’t change the fact that these girls are still giving up 50% of their OnlyFans money to him, in hopes that they will.
Given how much they are spending on management (50% of their income), would they be better off with other options? We’ll talk about that later. But for now, let’s move on to Jack Doherty.
Jack Doherty
His official page claims he reps at least two girls we all know he doesn’t, which are McKinley Richardson and Camila Araujo. But we know he does rep some girls, so let’s talk about what he offers.
Jack’s main selling point is simple: his fame. The idea is that association with him drives traffic. The problem is an audience mismatch.
His content is geared toward:
- Teenagers
- Younger viewers
- Audiences with limited spending power
In many cases, these are not ideal customers for OnlyFans creators. So while exposure may increase, revenue quality does not always follow. If a creator is giving up 80% of their income, that distinction matters.
He, like Owen Llynch, passes off the day-to-day management of your account to a 3rd party. So what does he bring to the table? According to him, “his fame”. Just by association with him, you’ll get more followers. The problem with this concept is that Jack Doherty is a YouTube prankster kind of guy whose target audience skews young. The guys who watch his video are teenagers and young adults. These are not the people who have a lot of money to spend on pretty girls, or in many cases, aren’t legally able to even access adult content.
So, what are the girls giving up 80% of their income for? They’re really getting out of this relationship.
Clavicular
Now let’s talk about Clavicular. He operates in the looksmaxxing and livestream space, with a highly engaged audience.
The problem is that those watching him stream tend to be on the younger side and either don’t have a lot of disposable income to spend on a girl on OnlyFans or aren’t even old enough to have an account. But the mainstream media attention he gets is real. But is that enough to justify taking 70% – 80% of a girl’s income? Can he bring them enough attention to justify that figure?
We don’t know how long he’s been repping each of the girls on his agency roster, but let’s take a look at their success so far to see what influence being associated with him has had on their marketing.
Looking at creators reportedly under his agency shows mixed performance:
- Some accounts grow steadily
- Others stagnate or decline
- Engagement rates are often extremely low
In other words, results vary widely.
Streamers like Livy Alex publicly rejected offers, claiming contracts required appearing on Clav’s streams (with sexual elements implied) for an 80/20 split favoring management. She called it predatory.
Last week, however, Clavicular’s OnlyFans agency roster leaked and revealed what he’s charging these girls to manage them. Now, keep in mind we already know that others like him outsource the day-to-day operations of the account, so his contribution comes from what exposure he can get you by being associated with him.
- Scarlet Aurora 70%
- Alice Rosenblum 70%
- Brandi Burrr 80%
- Grace Rayne 70%
- Maya Teague 80%
- Isabella Seravalli 80%
- Brianna Rose 80%
- Raegan Owens 80%
- Taylor Townn 80%
- Amber Rodriguez 70%
- Bella Mischenko 80%
- Sophia Moistoneir 80%
- Celina Powell 80%
Scarlett Aurora (instagram.com/scarlettaaurora)
She’s been posting for over a year now and in that time has only gained 6,833 followers. This is a really hot 18-year-old from Florida. Even the slightest effort with a girl like her should have produced much higher numbers.
Alice Rosenblum (instagram.com/alice.rosenblum)
She has 960k followers, and her account is growing steadily. She’s gained over 50,000 followers over the last 30 days. This seems to be one of his more successful girls who are on his roster.
Brandi Burrr (instagram.com/brandiburrr)
She currently has 215k followers and gains about 8 new followers a week. Her engagement is at 0.26%, which is well below average. That’s not a success story.
Grace Rayne (instagram.com/gracexrayne)
She has 433k followers, which may sound like a lot, but she loses about 52 of those a day. Her engagement is 0.01% (so low it barely even registers). These numbers tell us one thing: not only is she not growing, but the followers she has now aren’t interested in her content. This does not speak well to Clavicular’s influence on her grand.
Mya Teague 80% (instagram.com/mya.teague)
This is another marketing failure story for Clavicular. While this girl has 57.9k followers, her engagement is extremely low (0.26%) and even worse, she’s not only not growing, she’s actually losing about 14 followers a week. So what is she getting for the 80%? She’s giving up 80% of her income for help growing her brand. Does it look like it’s working?
Isabella Seravalli
This account is hard to locate and verify. While there is an Isabella Seravalli on Instagram, it’s hard to match her to a known OnlyFans account. That means if he is marketing this girl, he’s not doing a very good job.
Brianna Rose
There are so many girls who go by the name “Brianna Rose” on OnlyFans that I couldn’t find the one associated with Clavicular.
Raegan Owens
Her Instagram page was deleted, and her OnlyFans page seems all but dead. So, not really sure what he’s contributing to her.
Taylor Townn (instagram.com/taylor.townn)
She has a small following (16.5k followers) and a very low engagement rate (0.56%). She is active and collabs with other creators in the Miami area (like Amber Rodriguez and Bella Mischenko), so it’s possible that her previous page was deleted and this is her attempt to grow a new one. But a closer look at her posts shows they date back more than a year. So that means being associated with Clav hasn’t gotten her much attention on social media.
Amber Rodriguez (instagram.com/4mbuh)
She has 147k followers and is growing at a rate of about 200 followers a week, which is at least some level of growth. The problem with her account is that her engagement rate is only 0.43%, which is well below average. She also has a YouTube channel, but it has only 710 subscribers.
Bella Mischenko (instagram.com/bella_mischenko)
Bella has 77.6k followers and is growing at a rate of about 40 new followers a week. That may not sound like much, but it is growth. The problem with her account is that her engagement is nearly non-existent at 0.09%.
Sophia Moistoneir (instagram.com/sophiamoiss)
She has 55.1k followers and is growing about 244 followers a day. That’s solid for an account of that size. The problem is that her engagement is well below average (0.42%). Still, she at least has positive growth, and that’s saying something.
Celina Powell 80% (instagram.com/celinapowell)
One look at her Instagram profile, and you might be tempted to say she’s one of his biggest girls on the roster with 3.3 million followers and a growth of about 165 new followers a day. But a deeper dive shows her engagement is nearly non-existent (0.02%). That low level of engagement shows us that those following her don’t care about what she’s posting.
The Core Problem
The model itself is not inherently wrong. Marketing has value. Exposure has value. But the issue is pricing versus delivery.
If a creator is giving up 50%, 70%, or even 80%, then the agency should be delivering:
- Consistent growth
- High-quality traffic
- Strong conversion systems
- Long-term brand building
Instead, many of these deals rely on hype, association, and hope, and that is where things start to feel predatory.
If you are going to give up such a big percentage of your earnings, you should be getting something big for it in return. This isn’t about how they manage the day-to-day operations of their account, but how they come through with growing their profiles.
Is There a Better Way?
That is the real question. Because it is not just about whether these agencies work. It is about whether they are the best option.
Creators should be asking:
- What exactly am I paying for?
- Is this audience actually converting?
- Can I build this myself or with a smaller team?
- Am I getting long-term value or short-term spikes?
- Is there anything else they bring to the table?
The math sounds good. The promise sounds exciting. But the reality is far more complicated. Yes, 100% of nothing is nothing.
But giving away 70% to 80% of your income only makes sense if the person you are working with can consistently deliver results that you could not achieve on your own.
And based on the data, that is far from guaranteed. Before signing anything, creators need to look past the hype and ask a simple question:
Am I building a business, or am I just renting someone else’s audience?
Marketing is big. Probably the biggest factor in the success of their account. The more people who know about a person, the more money they make on their OnlyFans. This we know.
But you need to consider the audience (the source of the traffic). Who are these people exposing you to? I mean, who cares if a bunch of 16-year-old boys know your name? They are too young to join your OnlyFans anyway.
What you want is exposure, but a company that has legitimate traffic sources, its own network of traffic that features men who are over 21 from countries that tend to spend money on things like OnlyFans. These are known as “Core Tier 1 Countries,” which include the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Germany, France, the Netherlands, Belgium, Switzerland, Austria, Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Finland, Ireland, Iceland, Spain, Italy, Portugal, Slovenia, Australia, and New Zealand.
So you don’t only want to be marketed to guys who are over 21 but from countries that can afford to spend money on you, not some guy from Somalia, India, or Haiti.
- Then you want to find out if they are driving traffic directly to your OnlyFans or are they also helping you grow your socials?
- Do they offer anything else like content protection (DMCA) services?
- What else can they do for you? Can they help you with brand deals or get deals with OF TV (or other similar projects)?
These are the kind of things that you want to consider when deciding if you want to work with an OnlyFans management agency.
There are a lot of guys out there wanting to manage your account. 99% of them are crap. That’s why you have to really take the time to see what they are offering you.
You don’t want a company that just manages you. You want someone to help you grow your account as well, a true partner.
Because think about it this way, the more money you make, the more money they make.
You want to work with a company that has its own internal source of traffic. But really find out what that source is.
Do they have websites, or maybe they have a large social media presence? Do they control a network of Reddit communities that might be able to push traffic to your OnlyFans?
There are many options for traffic; just make sure you fully understand what they are.
You don’t want to connect with a guy whose only claim to fame is that he’s a Twitch streamer or YouTuber with a bunch of kids following him. What the heck will that do for you?
Is there such a thing as a good OnlyFans agency? Yes. It’s rare. But they are out there.
You just have to slow down and really take the time to ask what it is they are offering you, get it in writing, and check out their claims. Do your research as I have. Not sure where to start? Just DM me on Telegram or Reddit. I’m always just a quick click away, and I’ll try to help you out.


