Jemma Lucy admitted she ‘regrets making six figures on OnlyFans’ as she discusses her major life change after welcoming a daughter.
The Celebrity Big Brother star, 36, hopes her five-year-old tot knows ‘she fought to change’ after she resorted to the adult content platform after her TV career pleated.
‘I’ve made six figures. At first, it was really PG, but as the money becomes addictive, you push your boundaries a little more,’ she told The Sun.
‘You end up doing things that your body and mind are saying no to.’
‘I’ll never be able to erase the past, but at least I can show her it’s no longer who I am.
‘Hopefully, by being vocal about the negative aspects of the industry, she’ll never see it as an option.’
Jemma Lucy admitted she ‘regrets making six figures on OnlyFans ‘ as she discusses her major life change after welcoming a daughter
The Celebrity Big Brother star, 36, hopes her five-year-old tot knows ‘she fought to change’ after she resorted to the adult content platform after her TV career pleated
The Ex On The Beach alum stopped making content about a year ago, starting from ditching collaborations and eventually interrupting solo content – although her page still exists.
Jemma stressed she is fully committed to give her daughter ‘every opportunity possible’ such as going to private school or singing or having jiu-jitsu lessons.
Yet, she still feels other mothers at school are ‘a bit off’ with her, admitting she already feels judged for being heavily tattooed.
Now nurturing her pᴀssion for podcasting, Jemma vowed to advise and help women going through the ‘same path’.
She spilled the beans on her upcoming project, revealing she has finalised the first series with some ‘great guests’.
The former TV star remarked podcasting represents ‘freedom’ – a platform where she controls the narrative – while she claimed her time on OnlyFans is ‘ᴅᴇᴀᴅ and buried’.
Speaking on her daughter, she said: ‘If she ever finds my interviews, I want her to see me saying how much I regret it. That I’m proud of where I am now. That I fought to change.
Her candid interview comes after Jemma issued a warning to anyone seeking lip and body fillers, revealing just how easy it is to become a ‘qualified’ pracтιтioner.
‘I’ve made six figures. At first, it was really PG, but as the money becomes addictive, you push your boundaries a little more. You end up doing things that your body and mind are saying no to,’ she told The Sun
Jemma appeared on Celebrity Big Brother back in 2017 (pictured)
Jemma stressed she is fully committed to give her daughter ‘every opportunity possible’ such as going to private school or singing or having jiu-jitsu lessons
The CBB alum is no stranger to tweakments, having undergone years of Botox, three Brazilian bum lifts and two boob jobs.
Yet while Brits have long been warned of the dangers of going abroad for these procedures, Jemma has revealed she witnessed firsthand dodgy practices taking place here in the UK.
Speaking exclusively to MailOnline, Jemma revealed that after years of getting fillers in her lips and hips she decided to learn how to administer the treatments herself.
She approached a salon in Manchester that offered training courses and was shocked to learn that for a fee of £6,000 and after just two days she would be given a diploma and ‘qualified’ to do the injections herself.
Jemma explained: ‘I thought “two days? Is that what it takes for me to be able to go and inject people?” But all right, then I’ll do it.
‘So I did the course, and on the last day of the course, she was sending us ways to get all the products, all the filler and the Botox and all the stuff that we need and I noticed one girl was given products that she hadn’t been trained to use yet.
‘There are different stages you need to pᴀss for different qualifications, so the first one for example is lips and cheeks, and then the next stage is under eyes and noses… So it was a bit dodgy.
‘And then we were told how to get our hands on unlicensed product, things that aren’t licensed here because they’re not deemed safe here, like products from Korea and China. They’re illegal here. It was to cut costs.
‘I was asking how to do things properly and it was shrugged off like it didn’t matter. Like “just do it this way. This is how everybody does it.”
The Ex On The Beach alum stopped making content about a year ago, starting from ditching collaborations and eventually interrupting solo content – although her page still exists
Read More Complaints about botched ‘tweakments’ soar as Brits including Love Island star Faye Winter reveal they have been permanently scarred
‘But my morals are different, I just wouldn’t want to do that.’
Jemma decided to continue with her aesthetics career but revealed she found it a struggle to get hold of the legal and licensed products that are required in the UK.
‘It’s crazy how hard it is,’ she explained. ‘I found it hard to do the whole prescription process because you have to have a doctor with you to prescribe the Botox and then you have to go to the pharmacy to collect it.
‘It’s a long process and and that’s why so many people cut all these corners.
‘And I just thought after two days of training and being shown how to do everything dodgy, this isn’t for me. So I stopped doing it.’
Jemma was also fearful because of her lack of training, recalling: ‘When I used to inject people’s lips, I used to think, “Oh my God, if this goes wrong, I would literally just ring 999. I wouldn’t know what to do.
‘Knowing what to do because someone’s told you it, and actually doing it for the first time yourself is just completely different.’
Under current rules, an aesthetic pracтιтioner in the UK doesn’t need any mandatory qualifications. It means that anyone can go on a training course and then be allowed to perform dermal filler treatment.