I was bullied for being tall — now I make $100K a month on OnlyFans

A 6-foot-2-inch content creator revealed how she went from being bullied for her height to making $100,000 per month on OnlyFans.

Marie Temara, 27, who towers 10 inches above the average US woman, has admitted she used to be embarrassed about her height and wished she was shorter.

After losing her job as an accountant in 2020 and dealing with a breakup in 2021, the Florida resident started a TikTok account about her stature, amassing millions of views on her videos.

After gaining more than 390,000 followers on the app, she turned to OnlyFans, sharing clips in which she flaunts her height by standing near or kicking over everyday objects.

Now, Temara said she makes “what [she] used to make in a year in a month.”

“I was so shocked — I thought, ‘Wow, people actually like this,’” she told PA Real Life.

Maria Temara is now making more in a month on Only Fans than she made in a year at her former job.
TikTok/@
marietemara4.0
Temara makes videos showing her height in comparison to household objects.
Temara shows off her height by posing with household objects in her videos.
TikTok/@
marietemara4.0
The 6-foot-2-inch former accountant admitted that she once struggled to feel proud of her lofty stature, but has since grown to love it.
TikTok/@
marietemara4.0

It wasn’t always positive, though.

“I was always a head taller than everyone else,” she said. “I used to get bullied for being so tall. People would call me a boy because I was taller than everyone else, which was really hard.”

Temara comes from a long line of sky-high genes, with her mom standing at 6 feet, 5 inches tall, and her dad, like her, boasting a 6-foot-2-inch frame.

While, as she’s previously admitted, it took her some time to embrace her height, posting videos about being tall has helped.

“So many people commented saying they thought I looked so good and thanked me for sharing, saying they finally have someone they can look up to,” she said.

Temara says she hopes people who see her videos feel inspired to embrace their own bodies, gaining confidence in the process — particularly younger girls.

“I want people to know that it is okay to be different,” she said.

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