A woman claimed she was ‘so pretty’ she never had to pay for a trip abroad as she was always carried around by wealthy men.
OnlyFans star Sam Parks, who often travels to glamorous destinations including Dubai, Bali, Los Angeles and Thailand, said the sweet privilege was “very real”.
Sam appeared on the Shadow Banned podcast alongside her friend and fellow influencer Anita Cassin, where the pair said they enjoyed big benefits due to their looks.
Anita claimed she was ‘given jobs’ she was not qualified for because she was pretty.
Gold Coast-based Sam said trips to Las Vegas, Utah and New York were free.
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OnlyFans star Sam Parks, who often travels to glamorous destinations including Dubai, Bali, Los Angeles and Thailand, said the sweet privilege was “very real”.

Gold Coast-based Sam said her trip to Las Vegas, Utah and New York was free
“I’ve never had to pay for a trip abroad,” she said.
Anita then said that you were “flying a little”.
Sam’s comments come months after a model and business owner who’s been told she’s ‘beautiful’ all her life opened up about the ‘downsides of being pretty’.
Emily Adonna, who lives in California, has unwittingly caused a stir online after discussing a serious experience.
In a series of TikTok videos, Emily claims she was sexually assaulted by a stranger and says people haven’t taken her seriously in the past.

Sam appeared on the Shadow Banned podcast alongside her friend and fellow influencer Anita Cassin, where the pair said they get big benefits from their looks
“Pretty privilege is one thing, I’m not here to deny it, but it has downsides,” she said.
“I’ve never been in a job where I haven’t been harassed. Rarely have I been in social situations where I haven’t been harassed,” says Emily.
“People don’t usually take ‘no’ for an answer with me, because they think I’m something to own.

“I’ve never had to pay for a trip abroad,” said Sam, pictured on holiday in Dubai.
“People don’t ask before touching me in public, I get caught regularly, I’ve been mugged by a stranger.”
Emily claims she once passed up a business opportunity because others thought she was “too young and beautiful” and thought she would be “distracting to other people in the industry”.
Emily said she also noticed a difference in the way other people treated her when she was fully dressed compared to when she was wearing casual clothes.
“I’m treated differently, and it’s day and night, from when I go out in public with a mask and old tattered oversized clothes, and look how I look right now,” he said. she declared.

Anita (right) claimed she was ‘given jobs’ she wasn’t qualified for because she was pretty
“When I look ragged, people don’t touch me, they don’t feel entitled to me.”
In a follow-up video, Emily claims that often when talking about negative experiences, she asks questions such as “what were you wearing?” », « Were you too nice? and ‘why were you alone?’
“It’s the idea that because I’m present and I’m pretty, there’s a sense of entitlement to that space, or that I’m automatically associated with something sexual – that’s the part I don’t don’t like,” she said.
‘People say ‘Well, you’re a role model, so you should be used to attention or you should want that attention. That’s why you do it, isn’t it?’, no.’
It comes after a woman sparked an online debate about ‘pretty privilege’ after asking whether attractive women knew their ‘ugly’ counterparts were treated differently.
The anonymous woman took to a UK-based parenting forum Mumsnet to gather different opinions on the subject after her conventionally beautiful friend insisted that any woman could walk into a bar and get hit on by a man.
Elsewhere, attractive women have revealed how they received cash, free concert tickets and even better healthcare thanks to a ‘nice privilege’.
Women around the world have taken to TikTok in recent months to swap stories of the perks they’ve enjoyed just for being conventionally beautiful, from free drinks to kinder treatment from strangers.


Emily Adonna, who lives in California, (pictured) says she is ‘sick of being pretty’ because of the ‘inconvenience’ of pretty privilege In a series of TikTok videos, Emily claims she was sexually assaulted by a stranger and says people haven’t taken her seriously in the past

“I’ve never been in a job where I haven’t been harassed. Rarely have I been in social situations where I haven’t been harassed. People don’t usually take ‘no’ for an answer with me, because they think I’m something to own,” says Emily.