For years, TV has loved the girlboss. We’ve all grown up watching pencil-skirted lawyers in ’90s procedurals (Ally McBeal), the cool but chronically overworked magazine editor grabbing coffee on the go in stilettos (SATC), and the sexy, frazzled but always-on-her-game PR woman (also SATC) as the archetypes of the ambitious career woman. But lately, TV has a new favourite—the woman with an OnlyFans account. Over the last month, no less than three TV shows have debuted protagonists who begin to dabble in online sex work, suggesting that the archetype is well on its way to becoming as recognisable as the ruthless career woman or the exhausted sitcom mom that came before it.
There was a time when any portrayal of sex work on screen was accompanied by a kind of tragic neon gloom that was meant to signal moral disapproval. These were characters living life on the margins, existing only for shock value or as cautionary tales. They delivered dramatic monologues about their plight, even as cigarette smoke curled theatrically towards the ceiling. But in today’s terminally online world, OnlyFans has made what was once salacious seem commonplace—in Margo’s Got Money Troubles, Margo (Elle Fanning), a broke single mother, uses it to buy diapers; in Euphoria season three, a young suburban newlywed (Sydney Sweeney) uploads fetish content to fund her extravagant tastes. Elsewhere, in shows like the recent Beef season two and Black Mirror series seven in 2024, cam sites become portals to not only showcase a dysfunctional relationship but also tools of blackmail and surveillance.
This shift is all over Maximum Pleasure Guaranteed, the new Apple TV thriller starring Tatiana Maslany as Paula, a recently divorced mother whose life has collapsed into a parenting logistical nightmare featuring an unending cycle of pick-ups, work stress, mounting bills, and the vague sense that she will always be behind the 8-ball no matter how hard she tries. Paula allows herself one indulgence: logging onto a cam site by night to flirt with a beautiful younger man named Trevor, who both listens to her problems and calls her gorgeous. It may only exist through the soft glow of her laptop screen, but Paula’s relationship with Trevor mirrors a thousand other internet-era arrangements that are salves for loneliness in an age where even romance comes with a monthly subscription. Then, during one of their sessions, Paula witnesses what appears to be Trevor being abducted on screen, kicking off a spiral that involves extortion, blackmail, and even death.







