The woman who went viral for selling her farts in jars says that’s not even her biggest money-maker anymore.
Stephanie Matto, from Connecticut, now makes what she calls an “amazing income” selling pre-chewed food to men online.
“A lot of people know me as the girl who sold her farts in jars, or boob sweat, or pre-chewed food,” Stephanie told NudeNewz.
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“But I want people to know I’m a regular human being.
“I’m not just a sex object.”
Before the headlines and shock-factor fame, Stephanie was a full-time YouTuber with more than 370,000 subscribers, creating lifestyle videos, vlogs and personal stories.

Over time, she noticed her audience was overwhelmingly male and her content began shifting towards dating, sex and taboo topics.
“YouTube did not like that,” she said.
“Very quickly my channel became unmonetizable.”
With her income suddenly gone and a ready-made audience already there, she decided to pivot to OnlyFans.
“I knew I had a built-in audience waiting for spicier content,” she said.
While selling her farts brought global attention, Stephanie says it’s another unusual request that quietly brings in serious cash.
Men regularly pay her to pre-chew food before sending it to them.
“I’ve made quite an amazing income from this,” she said.
“A lot of these men wear dentures, and I think they crave that closeness of eating something I’ve had in my mouth.”
Because of platform rules, the transactions happen off OnlyFans, and she says the requests can be strangely intimate rather than sexual.

Other commissions have pushed the boundaries of imagination.
“One guy wanted a full fart documentary,” she said.
“So I filmed random farts throughout my entire day, in bed, in the car, in the bath.
“It was honestly pretty epic.”
But even that didn’t top the strangest request she’s ever received.
“A guy asked me to film myself accidentally hitting him with my car,” she said.
“I had to get out, blame him for the accident and then refuse to give my insurance details.”
She laughs remembering it.
“It was so niche and so funny.
“It was an Oscar-worthy performance and I still rewatch it and laugh.”
Despite her online persona, Stephanie insists she runs her business entirely alone.

“I don’t use management or chatting agencies,” she said.
“I do 100 per cent of the work myself.
“I hustle every single day to give my fans something authentic.”
She keeps strict boundaries too, choosing to only make solo content.
“In my real life I’m actually very reserved,” she said.
“Making more money isn’t worth crossing my own boundaries.”
Away from the internet, Stephanie describes herself as deeply introverted and happiest at home with her dogs.
“I think people assume I’m super extroverted, but I’m not,” she said.
“This job has given me the freedom to stay home and live quietly.”
The financial freedom has been life-changing.
She’s bought a house, helped her family financially and taken loved ones on trips, even if they weren’t thrilled about how she made her money at first.

“I think once they saw the freedom it gave me, they accepted it,” she said.
On TikTok, she focuses on pop culture and storytelling, keeping things deliberately PG.
“I want my brand to be more than sexiness,” she said.
“I want it to be about what I have to say.”
Looking back, Stephanie says she’s learned one thing above all else.
“You can’t make everyone happy,” she said.
“So you might as well build the life you want.
“Other people’s opinions aren’t going to pay your bills.”
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