Bonnie Blue’s Channel 4 documentary has sparked backlash, drawing hundreds of Ofcom complaints after it aired last week. 1,000 Men And Me: The Bonnie Blue Story, the film gave a behind-the-scenes look at the porn star’s daily life, including her controversial attempt to sleep with 1,000 men in 12 hours.
The documentary followed her throughout the challenge, with Channel 4 showing pixelated footage of Bonnie—real name Tia Billinger—having sex with multiple men. At the time of airing, viewers branded the programme “disgusting,” according to The Mirror.
In total, the show received 160 Ofcom complaints. This comes after a Mirror writer claimed, “the new Bonnie Blue documentary may be the worst thing I’ve ever seen on Channel 4.”
As the documentary aired, viewers flooded social media to voice their reactions.
“So Bonnie Blue gets a documentary on channel 4 where she can promote and glamorise her lifestyle for the kids watching at home but we need IDs to see posts on X because ‘we need to protect the kids’,” one user fumed.
“I feel beyond uncomfortable watching this Bonnie Blue documentary, the fact she’s been given a platform is concerning. Like it or not, this affects everyone in this generation, how normal this discourse has become from a woman herself is not okay,” another commented.
A third viewer shared: “Watching the bonnie blue doc on C4 and honestly I feel a little sick and might turn it off,” while a fourth outraged fan wrote: “This bonnie blue documentary is disgusting!”
In the hour-long documentary, the star also discussed her next planned ‘challenge’—‘Bonnie Blue’s petting zoo’—a proposed sex stunt that was ultimately scrapped after OnlyFans permanently banned her from the platform just days before it was set to happen.
Bonnie had planned to be “tied down” in a glass box inside a London house, where strangers could come in and do “whatever they wanted.” In the documentary, she boasts: “I am going to be completely helpless, tied down, gagged, choked.”
Read More: UK Pornography Taskforce to Propose Banning ‘Barely Legal’ Content After Channel 4 Documentary Airs
Ahead of the broadcast, Channel 4 defended its choice to produce the documentary about the online porn star, stating they were “proud” of the programme and aimed to “stimulate debate.”
This isn’t the first setback for Channel 4, as they also faced pressure from advertisers requesting their ads be removed from the controversial documentary.
Source: Dailyrecord.co



