Bonnie Blue
FearBuck @FearedBuck / X

Adult content creator Bonnie Blue, real name Tia Billinger, has shared new details of troubling pregnancy symptoms this week via social media, prompting medical experts to warn of grave risks to her alleged unborn child including blindness from potential STIs passed during birth.​

In case you missed it, the 26-year-old claimed last month she became pregnant after unprotected sex with around 400 men at a London mansion on 7 February, an event billed by organisers as a bid for a 'world cream pie record'. She announced the pregnancy soon after, sharing videos of a home test and an ultrasound, though some online observers have flagged the test clip as lacking a clear control line, casting doubt on its validity.​

Bonnie Blue Pregnancy Draws Expert Warnings

Blue has been frank about her symptoms in recent updates, describing vomiting, nausea, lightheadedness, dizziness and what she calls 'bad' trapped wind. 'And when I say it's been bad, genuinely, it's so uncomfortable and stinks, so that's really attractive,' she said in one video. Alongside that, she's posted about lifestyle tweaks like healthier eating, more water and outdoor walks, framing it all as her early pregnancy journey for followers.​

Doctors speaking to the source paint a darker picture tied to the conception circumstances. One infectious disease physician said unprotected encounters with multiple partners in quick succession 'significantly increase the risk of contracting sexually transmitted infections that could harm both mother and baby.' He told reporters: 'When someone has unprotected sex with multiple partners in a compressed timeframe, the probability of exposure to infections rises dramatically.'

HIV, syphilis and hepatitis B can cross the placenta, the expert explained, potentially causing lifelong issues or miscarriage. Gonorrhoea or chlamydia might pass during delivery, leading in severe cases to pneumonia, blindness or developmental problems for the newborn. Another specialist noted infections in pregnancy heighten chances of premature birth or low birth weight, which hampers breathing, feeding and growth after birth. 'Early testing and monitoring are crucial whenever there is a possibility of infection,' it added.​

Deeper Perils in Bonnie Blue's Claimed Conception

These warnings feel all the more pointed because Blue's past fertility struggles make the timing suspicious to some. She once said, 'I tried to get pregnant for years with my ex-partner and really, really struggled, and I'd have to go down the IVF route. So I wish I could say I might get pregnant, however, I'm not in that position where I can fall pregnant naturally.' Now, after one wild night, she's documenting what she insists is a viable pregnancy.

Researchers raise even odder possibilities from multi-partner exposure in one fertility window. Heteropaternal superfecundation happens when two eggs get fertilised by different men's sperm in the same cycle, yielding twins with distinct dads. Superfetation, rarer still, sees a second pregnancy kick off amid the first, with fetuses at varying stages; medical literature logs a handful of cases.​

Blue's camp has not detailed any STI testing beyond claims participants were screened beforehand, and there's no word from event organisers on health fallout. Online, the split is predictable: fans cheer her updates, while critics question if this is stunt or reality, and what it means for any child involved. The source offers no firm stats on viability odds or precautions she's taking beyond self-reports, leaving the real story hanging on whatever tests or scans come next.