A former factory worker who spent years punching a time clock says the strangest fan request she has ever received sums up her unlikely new life on OnlyFans.
Bobbyjo Noblitt swapped assembly lines and warehouse shifts for content creation during COVID, and says nothing prepared her for being asked to film topless armpit farts.
“The funniest and really easiest video request I ever got was to make a topless video doing armpit farts,” Bobbyjo told NudeNewz. “Where you put your hand in your armpit and make the farting sound. They requested that a few times.”
For Bobbyjo, who lives in Washington, the bizarre request still makes her laugh, but it also represents just how far her life has shifted from the grind she once knew.
“I started working as soon as I could,” she said. “I spent years in factories and warehouses on assembly lines, and I also worked at McDonald’s, Taco Bell and Dairy Queen.”
When COVID hit, Bobbyjo was laid off from warehouse work and left scrambling.

“I started my content career right as Covid really hit, so it actually worked out when I got laid off,” she said. “My unemployment was a mess. I got it all in a lump sum two months late, but I still needed something coming in.”
What began as a way to survive quickly became a route to freedom.
“I was inspired to start content creation so I wouldn’t have to punch a time clock anymore,” she said. “That was the goal.”
Now, instead of rigid shifts, Bobbyjo sets her own schedule and embraces the chaos of online creativity.
She admits she is older than many creators in her space, but says that has never bothered her.
“I have a niche and I’m a little older than most,” she said. “But I look good, I feel good, and I’m just going to keep sending it.”
Rather than chasing trends, Bobbyjo has leaned into being herself.

“My persona is just go for it and do as much of whatever you want as possible,” she said. “Make it your job to find the good in everyday.”
That mindset has reshaped how she approaches content.
“More recently I’m understanding just be you, do the things you want and enjoy and document that,” she said. “Even pulling out your driveway is content.”
Some ideas come from fans, others from daily life, and some from embracing new tools.
“I love making videos with the hover air x1,” she said. “I’m not huge with technology, but it was so simple and definitely worth it.”
As for limits, Bobbyjo keeps it light.
“My boundaries are the social platform guidelines,” she said, laughing.
The biggest change has been lifestyle.
“It’s allowed me to travel more and have cool experiences,” she said. “And I don’t have to clock in at a certain time, which was always the goal.”
She hopes to keep building toward the future, whether that means investing long term or escaping the cold.

“Hopefully I can earn enough to build something for the future,” she said. “Or a trip to the Caribbean right now, it’s cold in Washington.”
Online criticism has not disappeared, but Bobbyjo has learned to tune it out.
“Strangers on the internet are rude and hateful and everything they’re saying is cracked and not true,” she said. “They don’t know you. Keep doing your thing.”
Reactions from friends and family were mixed at first, but she no longer lets that define her choices.
“Some people are super supportive, others think it’s silly,” she said. “I don’t worry about it anymore.”
Her advice to anyone thinking about content creation is simple.
“Don’t stress the content,” she said. “Have fun, go do cool stuff, document it. That’s your content.”
From factory floors to filming armpit farts, Bobbyjo knows her journey sounds absurd to outsiders.
But for her, the payoff is clear.
“I think my content shows fun, joy and pleasure,” she said. “I’ve never been happier.”
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