Bonnie Blue
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Bonnie Blue's pregnancy claims have come under fresh scrutiny after viewers dissecting a TikTok video from her trip to Mexico said they could see what looked like a prosthetic bump, reopening doubts about whether the 26 year old adult performer is really expecting. The new row followed a clip in which Blue appeared to document morning sickness and told followers she had been sick six times, a claim that quickly drew both sympathy and suspicion online.​

Blue first said on 22 February that she was pregnant after what she described as a filmed stunt involving 400 men in a day, presenting the claim in a video diary about a 'mysterious illness'. Since then, each new post has been treated less like a routine update and more like a piece of evidence, with viewers picking through her videos frame by frame to decide whether the pregnancy is genuine, exaggerated or simply another stunt designed to keep the internet talking.​

Bonnie Blue Pregnancy Doubts Return

The latest scrutiny focused on a TikTok clip filmed in Mexico that begins with Blue leaning over a toilet before she sits on the bathroom floor in pyjamas, cradling the bowl and describing repeated bouts of sickness. She says she had been sick six times, but viewers fixated less on the vomiting than on her midsection, claiming what showed above the waistband looked more like silicone than a natural bump.

The theory spread quickly. One viewer wrote, 'Anyone notice the fake baby bump??', and similar replies soon turned that suspicion into the dominant reading of the clip.

Blue rejected that reading. In comments reported by the Daily Star, she said pregnant women often wear longer tops and swimsuits, that bumps vary in shape and skin tone, and added, 'I'm not sure why everyone is so shocked, I'm a s**t that's slept with thousands.'

The problem for her is not one video. It is the pile up of details that critics say do not quite hold together, and in stories like this, once doubt gets into the machinery, every new clip becomes a test it may not survive.​

Bonnie Blue Video Keeps The Questions Alive

Those doubts go back to the original pregnancy announcement. After the London event, Blue said, 'I'm hopeful that when you launch that many swimmers towards my ovaries when I'm at peak fertility, one of them is going to win the race,' a line that gave the claim its lurid hook and ensured it would be examined with unusual intensity.​

Viewers soon found other reasons to question it. The pregnancy test shown in her video appeared to display only the larger pregnancy line, while the smaller control line needed for a valid result could not be seen, and the report noted that Clear Blue's own instructions say a missing control line makes the test invalid. Blue nevertheless told viewers that 'one line – pregnant – no line [means] not pregnant'.​

Then came the ultrasound clip, which did little to quieten the noise. According to the report, the scan appeared to be carried out by a 'doctor' wearing a ski mask and T shirt, using what looked like an iPad rather than standard medical equipment. That may be internet theatre, it may be deliberate provocation, or it may be something else entirely, but it is not the kind of footage that settles anything.​

The morning sickness video has now folded neatly into the same pattern. Blue told followers, 'Morning sickness is no joke,' and said, 'This is the sixth time I've been sick, and I don't think I'll be leaving the toilet any time soon. So, women you can now relate to me, it is not fun being pregnant.' Yet even that attempt at candour has been treated as another exhibit in a wider case against her credibility.​​

Nothing released so far independently confirms that Blue is pregnant, so the claim remains exactly that, a claim. What is certain is that she has built a story impossible to ignore and almost equally impossible to trust, which is why every new post now arrives under the harsh light of suspicion rather than belief.​