Facts About Bonnie Blue: Net Worth, Early Career, and More
bonnieblue/Instagram

Jak White, a 20‑year‑old adult performer who took part in Bonnie Blue's group sex event in the United States in February, reportedly told RadarOnline that he now fears he may be the father of the pregnancy Blue claims to have conceived. His remarks add a more serious dimension to the ongoing Bonnie Blue 'baby daddy' drama and raised fresh questions about what, if anything, can be verified.

Blue, whose legal name is Tia Billinger, has spent recent months cultivating an online persona built around increasingly extreme sexual stunts. She first drew widespread attention after claiming to have slept with more than 1,000 men within 12 hours, a boast that prompted debate over whether the feat was even physically possible.

That claim led to a second, more heavily promoted event, initially planned for January and later staged on Feb. 7, which RadarOnline described as a '400-man breeding session.' Blue defended the delay by telling followers that the timing needed to be perfect for it to work, adding that 'some things cannot be rushed.'

Blue now says she is pregnant. She has not identified any potential father, and RadarOnline's reporting does not confirm that a pregnancy exists. With no verifiable evidence available, all claims should be treated cautiously.

'Baby Daddy' Drama Puts Spotlight on Participants

Blue told followers in a video, 'Guys, I am definitely pregnant... like, fully pregnant.' She added that she would 'have to ChatGPT what to do next.' The casual delivery contrasted with the gravity of the claim, but once announced, it created unavoidable real‑world implications for those who participated.

White told RadarOnline that the situation began to trouble him only after the event. He said he wondered whether the child could be his, adding that the question now occupied his mind and repeating the uncertainty moments later. His comments provide no evidence of paternity but highlight the personal fallout that can follow large-scale sexual events promoted more for spectacle than for clarity.

White also noted that the atmosphere was markedly different from the intense hype surrounding it online. According to RadarOnline, he described groups of participants chatting awkwardly and some appearing inexperienced, suggesting a disconnect between the event's branding and its reality.

DNA samples were 'reportedly collected' from participants, though it remains unclear whether they were intended for paternity testing or for promotional effect. A quoted source said that with so many participants, questions were 'always going to arise' if a pregnancy was later announced, adding that the emotional impact of such a claim shifts once the possibility becomes tangible.

The Limits of Spectacle

RadarOnline also noted that sceptics doubt the authenticity of Blue's pregnancy claim, suggesting it may be another attempt to generate attention. Her online persona is built on escalation, where each stunt must exceed the last to maintain visibility.

Blue's 'reported arrest and deportation from Indonesia,' did not slow her production of provocative content. A source said she 'anticipated the possibility of pregnancy and prepared accordingly,' though no details were provided. Another insider pointed to the difference between online engagement and real‑world consequences, citing medical, legal and personal considerations that arise independent of any publicity motive.

Blue's long-running persona is built on shock value and 'sexual extremity,' and it returns to that earlier 1,000-men-in-12-hours claim as the moment she broke into wider notoriety. Whether this pregnancy claim is real, exaggerated, or strategically teased, it has the same effect as her previous stunts, it forces an audience to weigh what they are being told against what can actually be verified. For at least one participant now admitting that he cannot stop wondering if it could be his, the distance between content and consequence has begun to look uncomfortably short.