OnlyFans and junior mining should have nothing in common. At least not on the surface. One sells sexual fantasy; the other sells geology. Yet both rely on the same three currencies: attention, trust, and connection.
OnlyFans figured that out early. It didn’t become a multibillion-dollar success through slick production or cinematic polish. It exploded because it felt personal. The platform replaced the distance of old-school celebrity with a sense of raw access. Subscribers weren’t paying for content — they were paying for connection.
That success offers a valuable lesson for a junior mining sector still communicating like it’s 1998.
Most junior miners remain trapped in the false comfort of “professionalism.” They believe credibility comes from perfect slide decks, polished videos, and corporate boilerplate. Every update sounds like it was drafted by a cross between the general…


