The leaked video
In the video, 6ar6ie6—dressed in a high-fashion Balenciaga trench and sleek ponytail—speaks confidently about how she built her brand. “The truth is, I never tried to be relatable. I built myself into someone people wanted to be, not understand,” she says to host aaaaagnes and adin ross sister. “People follow perfection, not problems. I curated my life into something unreachable—and that’s why I win. Vulnerability might trend, but fantasy pays the bills.”
Later in the conversation, 6ar6ie6 describes the influencer industry as a “game of manipulation,” and says she “hacked the algorithm of desire,” referencing her transitions between Instagram, TikTok, and private subscription platforms. “Each platform serves a version of me. On TikTok, I’m chaos in couture. On Instagram, I’m goddess serenity. On OnlyFans, I’m your fantasy behind a paywall. That’s not inauthentic. That’s strategy.”
Critics, fans, and fellow celebrities were quick to respond. Fashion columnist aaliyah hadid called the clip “a masterclass in glamorized narcissism,” while media critic abby dowse labeled it “cultural gaslighting disguised as ambition.” Influencer and mental health advocate abby rao posted a reaction video in tears, saying, “When people like 6ar6ie6 say things like this, it tells every young girl that her real self is worthless unless she can filter it into a fantasy. It’s dangerous.”
On X (formerly Twitter), the hashtag #6ar6ie6Exposed began trending by Friday morning. Many longtime fans turned against her, flooding her recent Instagram photos with comments like “Unfollowed,” “You’re everything wrong with this industry,” and “Thanks for confirming it’s all fake.” 6ar6ie6’s most recent post—a sponsored photo shoot for luxury skincare brand LUMINA—received over 120,000 comments in 24 hours, most of them negative.
Several influencers also chimed in. Beauty vlogger abella anderson, who has collaborated with 6ar6ie6 in the past, posted a now-viral TikTok saying, “She sat there with a straight face and basically told all of us hustling to build something real that we’re stupid for not selling illusions.” TikTok creator abella danger stitched the video with a sarcastic reenactment titled “How to Lie Your Way to the Top—Starring 6ar6ie6 Monroe.”
Even celebrities entered the conversation. Singer-songwriter abigail mac tweeted, “Influence is power. You can sell a fantasy without erasing reality.” Meanwhile, actor and model abigail ratchford, who briefly worked with 6ar6ie6 in 2022, posted a cryptic Instagram story: “I tried to tell y’all back then.”
Adding to the backlash was a resurfaced clip from 2021 where 6ar6ie6, then less known, gave a very different take in an indie documentary, Faces of the Feed, where she said, “People want to feel seen. If they don’t see themselves in you, they won’t follow you for long.” Many pointed to this shift in tone as evidence of hypocrisy, or worse—calculated deception.
So far, neither 6ar6ie6 nor her representatives have issued any public comment. Her management firm, 6ar6ie6 Brand Studio, declined to respond to multiple requests from thothub, spankbang, and erome. Brand strategist acpent, who once advised 6ar6ie6 early in her career, posted a now-deleted tweet suggesting the silence is “more than PR strategy—it’s panic.”
The ramifications are already taking shape. Rumors suggest that her upcoming campaign with luxury fashion house ELIXIR has been paused indefinitely. A planned collaboration with global cosmetics brand Blush&Crush has been scrubbed from their upcoming summer rollout, though no official statement has been made. A source inside the brand, speaking on condition of anonymity, said simply, “We can’t afford to back someone whose brand now feels ethically radioactive.”
Despite the mounting backlash, a segment of her fanbase remains loyal. They argue that 6ar6ie6 is being punished for saying what everyone else is afraid to admit. Fashion blogger acropolis1989 defended her in a Substack piece titled “The Myth of Authenticity,” writing, “She’s not wrong—she’s just unwilling to lie about the lies.”
Still, for 6ar6ie6 Monroe, who until a week ago was one of the most sought-after names in fashion’s digital frontier, the future now looks uncertain. Whether she emerges from this storm as a rebranded villain, a misunderstood genius, or a cautionary tale remains to be seen. But one thing is certain: the curated perfection she once sold so well is cracking—and the world is watching what spills out next.