Released by the conservative-leaning educational platform The Woke Files, OnlyFans: Modern Gomorrah is a 90-minute deep dive into the psychological, financial, and moral decay allegedly fostered by the subscription service. The documentary argues that OnlyFans is not simply a website for adult content; it is a digital Gomorrah—a city-state so steeped in transactional hedonism that it invites its own destruction.
Key takeaways from the film include:
Whether you agree with its premise or dismiss it as moral panic, the term "Modern Gomorrah" has stuck. It evokes a city where the currency is lust, the police are nonexistent, and the skyline is made of paywalled DMs.
We are approaching the "Hotdog Wars" phase of the digital economy (a nod to Dredd's infamous fast-food gang war). The market is saturated. The average OnlyFans creator makes less than $200 a month. The top 0.1%—the Verified elite—are effectively media moguls. onlyfans moderngomorrah dredd verified
But here is the twist that Karl Urban’s Dredd would appreciate: The law doesn't care about your morality.
The "Modern Gomorrah" narrative is a distraction. The left calls it exploitation; the right calls it degeneracy. The platform calls it "user-generated content." But the reality is far more cyberpunk: This is a logistics problem.
The only crime in Mega-City One was getting caught. The only crime on OnlyFans is failing to verify. If you provide the right documents, pay your taxes, and never dispute a chargeback, the Judges will let you sell anything. Anything. Whether you agree with its premise or dismiss
The core of Moderngomorrah’s brand identity is inextricably linked to the iconography of Judge Dredd—the legendary lawman from the British sci-fi comic 2000 AD. Unlike casual cosplay, Moderngomorrah’s adoption of the helmet and tactical gear is not merely a costume; it is a curated brand asset.
The choice of the Dredd persona serves a dual purpose. Visually, the helmet offers anonymity, shifting the audience’s focus entirely to the physique and the artistic composition of the content. Thematically, it evokes concepts of rigid discipline, authority, and survivalism. This "Lawgiver" vibe resonates deeply within the fitness and "grindset" communities, transforming a simple workout video or photoshoot into a cinematic narrative of strength and stoicism.
"As a content creator on platforms like OnlyFans, maintaining a verified status and adhering to community guidelines is crucial. For those producing adult content, like the creators behind 'Modern Gomorrha' or personalities such as 'Dredd', ensuring that your material complies with the platform's rules and your audience's expectations is key to success. Verification on OnlyFans not only enhances your profile's credibility but also opens up more features for engaging with your fans." the police are nonexistent
The phrase “Modern Gomorrah” is typically deployed to condemn OnlyFans for sexual immorality. This is a deliberate misdirection. The real obscenity of OnlyFans is not nudity; it is the precarity. It is the 10% commission the platform takes on every transaction. It is the lack of health insurance, retirement plans, or collective bargaining. It is the way the platform encourages parasocial relationships that blur the line between fan and stalker. It is the knowledge that at any moment, a payment processor like Mastercard or Visa could decide that “adult content” is too risky, and the entire megablock could be deplatformed overnight.
In Dredd, Ma-Ma’s downfall comes not from moral outrage but from a structural weakness: her control depends on fear, and fear depends on the illusion of omnipotence. When Dredd survives her initial trap, the illusion shatters. Similarly, OnlyFans’ power depends on the illusion that it is the only safe, legitimate platform for adult creators. But that illusion is cracking. Competitors like Fansly, Loyalfans, and others offer better terms. The rise of decentralized, blockchain-based platforms threatens the walled garden entirely. And the creators themselves, through unionization efforts and mutual aid networks, are beginning to realize that they are not just citizens of Peach Trees—they are its only true architects.