The adult industry is full of wild twists and turns, but this one’s straight out of a fever dream. Meet Wu Mon-mon, the self-proclaimed “No. 1 AV Star” of Taiwan—an accolade she’s earned after eight years and 150 films in the business. But the real story? She’s not just cashing in—she’s turning her family into a full-blown adult empire.
According to a recent interview with The Sun, Mon-mon pulls in a staggering £100K (S$169K) a month from OnlyFans, the digital playground where the bold get paid and the timid get left behind. That’s more than enough to make even the most conservative relatives reconsider their life choices—and that’s exactly what happened.

Mon-mon started her career in secrecy, terrified that her old-school Taiwanese family would cut her off if they discovered the truth. For months, she lived a double life, whispering prayers that her relatives wouldn’t stumble upon her content while scrolling the depths of the internet. But the money started rolling in—big money, the kind that turns disapproval into intrigue.
So she came clean. And instead of exile, she got an unexpected plot twist—her mother gave her blessing. Not just that—some of her relatives wanted in on the action. And why not? A monthly six-figure income can make even the staunchest traditionalist reconsider their stance on the adult industry.
Fast forward, and now at least two of Mon-mon’s family members have launched their own OnlyFans careers, with her guiding them through the fine art of shooting seductive, professional-grade content. The one boundary? She won’t watch their work. Some lines are never meant to be crossed, even in the Wild West of digital smut.

Mon-mon sees OnlyFans as a financial goldmine, a way for anyone to rake in cash without ever showing their face. Anonymity is an option, but in Singapore, where explicit content is outlawed, discretion isn’t just recommended—it’s the law.
A decade ago, this kind of story would’ve been tabloid fantasy. Now? Just another Tuesday in the era of digital debauchery.
The lesson? Sex sells. And in Mon-mon’s case, it sells so well, it turned family into business partners.
Last modified: March 1, 2025