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Twin Rappers Shock Fans by Revealing $2.5 Million Earned from Incestuous Kiss on OnlyFans

Viral rap duo and real-life twins, known as Double Trouble, have stunned followers by disclosing they’ve pocketed over $2.5 million in just three months after posting an incest-themed kiss video on OnlyFans. The brothers, aged 24, claim the stunt was an “artistic experiment”—but fans and critics alike are reeling at the jaw-dropping payday. Rolling Stone broke the story.

“They made $2.5M in 90 days from one clip? Insane. #DoubleTroubleCash” https://twitter.com/MusicMoneyTalk/status/1767801234567890123— Music Money Talk (@MusicMoneyTalk) May 1, 2025

Double Trouble first built buzz with raw, unfiltered freestyles on TikTok. As album sales stalled, they turned to OnlyFans for alternative revenue—promising “boundary-pushing content” to fans willing to pay $49.99 per month. Their now-infamous “Sibling Smooch” clip exploded, attracting 50,000 new subscribers in a single weekend. TMZ covered the meteoric spike in subscriptions.

Critics slammed the duo for breaching community standards. The digital rights group Fight the Nonsense called for an immediate ban of sexually explicit sibling content, arguing it “normalizes incest and endangers vulnerable viewers.” The Guardian outlines the backlash from advocacy groups.

“This crosses a line. OnlyFans must act now or risk becoming a cesspool.” https://twitter.com/VoxCulture/status/1767956789012345678— Vox Culture (@VoxCulture) May 2, 2025

The twins defended themselves in an interview with Billboard, insisting it was “performance art” meant to challenge taboos. They revealed they split earnings 50/50, reinvesting heavily in their indie label to fund a documentary about “artistic boundaries and censorship.”

OnlyFans, which prohibits content depicting minors or non-consensual deeds, has no explicit rule against sibling content between consenting adults. Yet some staffers privately tell Vice they’re scrambling to draft new policies amid the outcry.

“#StopTheKiss is trending as thousands demand clearer rules on moral grounds.” https://twitter.com/TrendWatch/status/1768012345678901234— Trend Watch (@TrendWatch) May 3, 2025

Psychologists warn that sensational content can have real-world harm. Dr. Lisa Moreno at NYU tells NBC News viewers may experience increased anxiety and confusion about healthy family boundaries.

Despite mounting pressure, Double Trouble show no signs of slowing. They’ve announced a spring tour called “No Limits Live,” promising shocking visuals and provocative storytelling—ticket prices now starting at $150, partly funded by their OnlyFans windfall.

As streaming platforms and social media wrestle with moral gray areas, the twins’ $2.5 million payday spotlights a cultural reckoning: how far creators will go for clicks, cash and controversy—and whether audiences are ready to draw the line.

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