Silicone Or Real? Fans Spot 'Prosthetic Belt' In Bonnie Blue's Pregnancy Video After 400-Man 'Breeding' Stunt
A pregnancy announcement built for shock value is now being judged frame by frame, and the internet has decided to play detective.

Bonnie Blue's pregnancy video, posted on TikTok during her spring break trip in Mexico and picked apart by viewers on 16 March, has triggered a fresh round of claims that the adult performer is faking a pregnancy after fans said they spotted what looked like a prosthetic bump strapped around her waist.
Blue said on 22 February that she was pregnant after a filmed sex stunt involving 400 men in a day, a claim she presented in a video diary charting what she described as a 'mysterious illness'. Since then, the story has moved less like a straightforward announcement than a rolling internet investigation, with each new clip examined for signs that the pregnancy is real, exaggerated or entirely staged.
Why The Pregnancy Video Drew Fresh Doubt
The latest scrutiny centred on a TikTok clip in which Blue sat on her bed wearing sunglasses, a white tank top and green bikini bottoms. Viewers zoomed in on her midsection and fixated on what they believed was a silicone bump visible above the waistband, with some arguing that it appeared to be attached by a belt rather than sitting naturally against her body.

That detail might have passed as internet overanalysis if Blue had not then kept her torso covered for the rest of the video. She later said she prefers one-piece swimsuits to bikinis during the Mexico trip because she 'prefers having my bump covered', but for sceptical viewers that explanation only hardened suspicion rather than settling it.
One user wrote, 'Anyone notice the fake baby bump??' and shared a zoomed-in image of the area in question. Others replied in kind, with short, relieved bursts of agreement such as 'I did', 'Yeah' and 'thank God', which says plenty about how little goodwill now surrounds this saga.
Blue has pushed back. In comments given exclusively to the Daily Star, she said, 'I'm sure a lot of pregnant women like myself enjoy wearing longer tops and swimsuits during their pregnancy. Everyone's bumps come in different shapes and sizes and skin colour can change on your tummy. I'm not sure why everyone is so shocked, I'm a s**t that's slept with thousands.'
How The Pregnancy Video Fits A Wider Claim
The trouble for Blue is that the doubt did not begin with this one clip. It goes back to the original pregnancy claim itself, which arrived after her team said the men involved in the event had not used protection as they tried to break the 'world cream pie record'. Footage from that stunt, according to the earlier report, showed Blue at Lord Davenport's London mansion surrounded by groups of men in blue ski masks.
After the event, she 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.' That line gave the story its lurid hook, but it also raised the stakes. Once a claim is framed that boldly, viewers start checking every frame.
They found more than one reason to do that. Blue used a Clear Blue pregnancy test in her video, yet only the larger pregnancy line was visible while the smaller control line, which is required for a valid result, could not be seen. Blue said that 'one line – pregnant – no line [means] not pregnant', but the article says Clear Blue's own instructions state that without a control line the test is invalid.
Then there was the ultrasound scene, which did not quieten anything. The scan was reportedly carried out by a 'doctor' in a ski mask and T-shirt, using what appeared to be an iPad rather than standard medical equipment. Nothing in the material released so far independently confirms that Blue is pregnant, so for now the claim remains just that, a claim, wrapped in a spectacle that keeps asking to be doubted.
© Copyright IBTimes 2025. All rights reserved.
















