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Mia Khalifa

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Mia Khalifa[a] (Arabic: ميا خليفة [ˈmijaː χaˈliːfa(h)]; born 1993[1]) is a Lebanese-American media personality and former pornographic film actress. Rising to prominence in late 2014, she became one of the most searched performers on Pornhub after a controversial scene featuring a hijab sparked global attention drawing both widespread popularity and backlash.

Key Information

Despite her brief three-month career in adult films, Khalifa was voted the "Number 1 Porn Star" on Pornhub in 2015.[2] In January 2017, xHamster reported that she was the most-searched-for adult actress of 2016.[3] In 2018, she became the most-searched-for actress on Pornhub.[4]

After leaving the adult industry, Khalifa has worked as a webcam model, OnlyFans creator, and sports commentator.[5] She launched her own line of jewelry in 2023. Khalifa has also advocated for sex workers' rights[6] and criticized U.S. military aid to Israel in the context of Israeli apartheid, which has led to backlash from commentators and former employers.[7]

Early life

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Khalifa was born in Beirut, Lebanon,[1] and raised Catholic in what she describes as a "very conservative" home.[5] She attended a French-language private school in Beirut, where she also learned to speak English.[5] Khalifa's family left their home in the wake of the South Lebanon conflict,[5] moving to the United States in 2001.[8]

After moving to the United States, her family lived in Montgomery County, Maryland,[5][8] where she played lacrosse in high school.[9] She has said she was bullied at school for being "the darkest and weirdest girl there", which intensified after the September 11 attacks.[5]

She attended Massanutten Military Academy in Woodstock, Virginia, and later graduated from the University of Texas at El Paso with a Bachelor of Arts in history.[5][10] She supported herself there by working as a bartender, model, and "briefcase girl" on a local Deal or No Deal–esque Spanish game show.[5]

Career

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Pornographic film career

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Khalifa entered the pornographic film industry in October 2014, after being recruited by a man who asked her if she was interested in nude modeling.[11][12] Her stage name was taken from the name of her dog, Mia, and American rapper Wiz Khalifa.[13]

She came to widespread attention after the release of a scene from Bang Bros in which she wears a hijab during a threesome with Julianna Vega and Sean Lawless.[5] The scene brought Khalifa instant popularity, as well as criticism from writers and religious figures, and led to her parents publicly disowning her.[5][14] Alex Hawkins, vice president of marketing for xHamster, said, "The outrage it caused in the Arab world ended up being a bit of a 'Streisand effect'. Suddenly, everyone was searching for her. The effort to censor her only made her more ubiquitous."[5] With more than 1.5 million views, the 22-year-old Khalifa became the most searched-for performer on the adult video sharing website Pornhub.[2]

On December 28, 2018, Pornhub revealed that she was the No. 1 ranked performer on their website.[4] After becoming the most searched-for actress on Pornhub, Khalifa received online death threats,[1][15] including a digitally manipulated image of Khalifa being beheaded by the Islamic State[16] and a warning that she would be "the first person in Hellfire",[17] to which she jokingly replied, "I've been meaning to get a little tan recently."[18] Lebanese newspapers wrote articles critical of Khalifa, which she considered trivial due to other events in the region.[19]

In an interview with The Washington Post, Khalifa said the controversial scene was satirical and should be taken as such, claiming that Hollywood films depicted Muslims in a far more negative light than any pornographer could.[18] Among those who publicly defended her was British-Lebanese author Nasri Atallah, who stated, "as a woman, she is free to do as she pleases with her body. As a sentient human being with agency, who lives halfway across the world, she is in charge of her own life and owes absolutely nothing to the country where she happened to be born."[1][4] Khalifa said, "Women's rights in Lebanon are a long way from being taken seriously if a Lebanese American porn star that no longer resides there can cause such an uproar."[18]

According to data from Pornhub, from January 3 to 6, 2015, searches for Khalifa increased five-fold. Around a quarter of those searches came from Lebanon, with substantial searches also from nearby countries Syria and Jordan.[20] Almaza, a Lebanese brewery, ran an advertisement showing a bottle of their beer next to Khalifa's signature glasses, with the slogan: "We are both rated 18+."[21] In January 2015, pop-rap duo Timeflies released a song titled "Mia Khalifa" in homage to her.[22]

In January 2015, Khalifa signed a long-term contract with Bang Bros' parent company, WGCZ Holding, who also own the largest free porn site XVideos. The contract required her to perform in multiple films each month. However, two weeks later, Khalifa had a change of heart and resigned.[5] The negative attention she received from her global attention prompted her to leave the industry: "It was an eye-opener for me. I don't want any of this, whether it's positive or negative—but all of it was negative. I didn't think too much into it about how my friends and family and relationships were suffering."[5] WGCZ Holding own a web page with a domain name using her stage name. Khalifa said it does not pay her for rights, even though it is written in her first-person voice.[23]

In a July 2016 interview with The Washington Post, Khalifa stated that she had only performed in pornography for three months and had left the industry over a year before, changing to a "more normal job". She said, "I guess it was my rebellious phase. It wasn't really for me. I kind of smartened up and tried to distance myself from that."[9] She said she continued to perform as a webcam model for Bang Bros for eleven months after she stopped shooting scenes before Complex Networks offered her to host a sports show.[24] Carter Cruise, a former performer who became a disc jockey, criticized Khalifa for reinforcing the social stigma against sex work in distancing herself from her previous career.[24]

In January 2017, xHamster reported that Khalifa was the most-searched-for adult actress of 2016.[3] In 2018, three years after leaving the industry, she was still the second-highest-ranked person on Pornhub.[25] In August 2019, Khalifa stated that she made $12,000 working in porn by making an estimated $1,000 per scene – standard contractor compensation from production studios in the industry, according to Alec Helmy, president and publisher of adult entertainment industry news site XBIZ – and that she did not receive residuals from BangBros or from Pornhub and other free sites where BangBros uploaded the videos.[23][26] While PornHub has not stated how much revenue Khalifa's videos had generated for the site, according to a 2019 estimate by Social Blade CEO Jason Urgo based on YouTube-like advertising revenue per view, she could have made over $500,000 had she been a PornHub partner.[26]

In July 2020, more than 1.5 million people signed a Change.org petition campaigning for her videos to be removed from sites like Pornhub and BangBros and her Internet domains returned to her.[27] BangBros sent her a cease and desist letter and set up a website to dispute statements she made about the company.[28][24] BangBros stated that Khalifa earned over $178,000 from them and their affiliates and was in the adult film industry for more than two years.[28]

Other ventures

[edit]

After three months working as an adult-film actor, Khalifa worked in Miami as a paralegal and bookkeeper.[5] She later transitioned into a career as a social media personality and webcam model, posting about style, food, and politics on networks such as Instagram, TikTok, and Twitter.[16] She sells sexually explicit material directly to subscribers on OnlyFans.[16] Khalifa runs a YouTube channel; livestreams on Twitch; sells photoshoots, merchandise, and access to exclusive content on membership website Patreon; and sold explicit photoshoots and videos on the social media website Findrow.[5] Columnist Dan Steinberg of The Washington Post wrote in 2016 that, despite Khalifa's change of career, her social media feed was "still a bit more risqué than that of, say, Ben Bernanke".[9]

She has used her social media presence to support professional sports teams from the Washington, D.C., area.[9] She and Gilbert Arenas hosted Out of Bounds, a daily sports show on Complex News's YouTube channel, from October 2017 to February 2018.[29] Khalifa then co-hosted Sportsball with Tyler Coe on Rooster Teeth. Its final episode was released on October 30, 2018.[30][31]

In May 2020, she made a guest appearance as herself in the Hulu show Ramy.[32]

In May 2021, she made a cameo appearance in Bella Poarch's music video for "Build a Bitch", along with other internet celebrities such as Valkyrae, Bretman Rock, Larray, and ZHC. She plays a woman created in a factory who joins a rebellion led by Poarch.[33][34][35]

In June 2023, Khalifa launched a jewelry line called "Sheytan", an anglicized form of the Arabic word for "devil", alongside Sara Burn, a former Virgil Abloh collaborator.[36]

Khalifa was featured in the Fall/Winter 2023 campaign for the London-based fashion label Aries as well as a photo book that was released the same year, titled Mia by Aries. The founder of the brand, Sofia Prantera, considers Khalifa to be her muse, stating "I felt immediately inspired by Mia's 'Punk' attitude. She is strong but extremely humble, and under her glossy appearance here is a tough young girl who has had to fight her way through so much adversity. I wanted to capture her wild spirit; raw and unpolished."[37]

Personal life

[edit]

Khalifa married her high school boyfriend in February 2011. They separated in 2014 and divorced in 2016.[1][5] In 2019, she married Swedish professional chef Robert Sandberg; they separated in 2020. From 2021 to 2022, she was in a relationship with Puerto Rican rapper and singer Jhayco.[13]

She has stated that her parents stopped speaking to her because of her adult film career.[18][14] Some Arab news outlets published a statement by Khalifa's family in 2015 condemning her involvement in pornography.[1]

In August 2021, Khalifa auctioned the glasses she had worn in several adult films to raise funds for victims of the 2020 Beirut explosion.[38]

Religious and political views

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In 2015, Khalifa stated that she was no longer a practicing Catholic.[20] She has a tattoo of the opening line of the National Anthem of Lebanon in Arabic[1] and a tattoo of the Lebanese Forces Cross, which she said was to "show solidarity with [her] father's political views" following a 2012 bombing. She told Newsweek that critics have claimed that her tattoos were disgracing Lebanon.[18]

Khalifa is an active Twitter user. In 2021, Khalifa criticized U.S. military aid to Israel[39] and called Israel an "apartheid state", which sparked backlash online.[40]

During the October 7 attacks, Khalifa tweeted, "If you can look at the situation in Palestine and not be on the side of Palestinians, then you are on the wrong side of apartheid and history will show that in time." In another tweet, she wrote "Can someone please tell the freedom fighters in Palestine to flip their phones and film horizontal."[41][42] She later said that her comments were not an endorsement of violence and that she intended to highlight the need for Palestinian freedom:

I just want to make it clear that this statement in no way shape or form is enticing [the] spread of violence, I specifically said freedom fighters because that's what the Palestinian citizens are ... fighting for freedom every day.[41]

Following this, Playboy ended its podcasting deal with Khalifa, calling her comments "disgusting and reprehensible".[41][42][43] Khalifa later tweeted: "I'd say supporting Palestine has lost me business opportunities, but I'm more angry at myself for not checking whether or not I was entering into business with Zionists. My bad."[41]

[edit]

In November 2016, an online petition called for Khalifa to be appointed by President-elect Donald Trump as the next United States Ambassador to Saudi Arabia.[44]

In 2018, the musical duo iLoveFriday released a diss track called "Mia Khalifa", in response to a fake tweet posted by a user impersonating Khalifa. The song became an internet meme after the "hit or miss" snippet gained popularity on the TikTok app.[45][46] At the time, it was said to be one of the most well-known viral TikTok memes in the Western world, and had been used in over four million TikTok videos.[47]

At the 2021 CPI on the COVID-19 pandemic in Brazil, Senator Luis Carlos Heinze mentioned that a study published in The Lancet on the effectiveness of chloroquine as a COVID-19 treatment was carried out by a company whose sales manager was a pornographic film actress.[48][49][50][51] In response, senator Randolfe Rodrigues jokingly proposed "summon[ing] Mia Khalifa".[48][52] Khalifa then wrote on Twitter, "I'm not a doctor, so don't take medical advice from fake memes of me you found on WhatsApp."[48][53][54]

See also

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Notes

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References

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Further reading

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Mia Khalifa (born Sarah Joe Chamoun; February 10, 1993) is a Lebanese-American social media personality, model, and former pornographic actress whose brief entry into adult films in late 2014 propelled her to global prominence amid intense scrutiny and backlash.[1][2] Born in Beirut and raised in a Maronite Christian family, Khalifa immigrated to the United States as a child, later studying history at the University of Texas at El Paso before entering the adult industry at age 21, where she appeared in approximately a dozen scenes over three months, earning about $12,000.[3][2] Her rapid ascent included topping Pornhub's rankings as the most popular performer in 2015, but it was marred by controversies, particularly a scene involving a hijab that prompted death threats from ISIS affiliates and condemnations from Lebanese clerics issuing fatwas against her.[4][5][6] Exiting the industry due to familial distress and personal regret, Khalifa transitioned to mainstream media, hosting sports programs such as a talk show with former NBA player Gilbert Arenas and contributing to outlets like Playboy TV, while building a following as an influencer advocating against pornography's exploitative nature.[7][8][9] Persistent online harassment and threats have shadowed her career, underscoring the enduring repercussions of her early work, yet she has leveraged her platform for commentary on Lebanese politics, animal rights, and cultural issues.[9][10]

Early Life and Background

Childhood in Lebanon and Family Origins

Mia Khalifa was born Sarah Joe Chamoun on February 10, 1993, in Beirut, Lebanon, to a Catholic family of Maronite Christian heritage.[11][12][13] Raised in a conservative household that emphasized traditional values and religious observance, Khalifa's early years were shaped by her parents' strict upbringing, which she has described as devoutly Catholic and protective against external influences.[14] The family resided in urban Beirut, where daily life reflected Lebanon's post-civil war recovery amid ongoing sectarian tensions and economic challenges, though Khalifa has not reported personal experiences of direct violence or hardship during this period.[15] From infancy until age 10, she attended a private school in Beirut, receiving an education influenced by French-language instruction common in elite Lebanese institutions, which prioritized academic rigor and cultural refinement in line with her family's focus on intellectual development over leisure or secular pursuits.[15] This environment instilled a foundational respect for learning and family-centric norms, contrasting with the broader instability of the region, including sporadic political unrest that affected daily security without profoundly disrupting her immediate family life.[1]

Immigration to the United States and Education

Khalifa's family relocated from Beirut, Lebanon, to the United States around 2001–2003 when she was approximately 10 years old, settling in Montgomery County, Maryland, to access superior economic opportunities unavailable amid Lebanon's instability.[16] This move exposed her to a stark shift from a Middle Eastern context to American suburban life, necessitating adaptation to English-language dominance and Western customs after prior immersion in Arabic and French schooling.[17] In Maryland, Khalifa attended public high school, navigating early adolescence in a multicultural environment that contrasted with her Lebanese upbringing and underscored the causal role of immigration in fostering resilience through cultural assimilation. She later transferred to Massanutten Military Academy in Virginia for disciplinary structure before completing secondary education.[18] Pursuing formal education, Khalifa enrolled at the University of Texas at El Paso, graduating with a Bachelor of Arts in history circa 2014, a field choice reflecting intellectual curiosity about societal developments amid her bicultural experiences.[19] [1] To finance her studies and independence, she took minimum-wage roles, including at the Texas-based fast-food chain Whataburger, embodying pragmatic economic incentives and aspirations for self-sufficiency common to immigrant-origin youth prior to atypical career paths. These positions highlighted the tangible barriers of low-skill labor in supporting educational advancement, distinct from the specialized prospects her degree later afforded.

Adult Film Career

Entry and Rapid Ascendancy

In late 2014, at the age of 21, Mia Khalifa—born Sarah Joe Chamoun—was approached by a scout while working at a Whataburger in Miami, who suggested she try nude modeling, leading to her rapid entry into the adult film industry.[20] [21] This contact prompted her to film her debut scenes in October 2014 with the production company Bang Bros, marking an impulsive decision without prior extensive planning.[21] [22] Over the subsequent three months, Khalifa appeared in approximately 11 to 12 scenes, primarily for Bang Bros and a few other studios, which quickly propelled her to prominence due to high online visibility.[2] [23] Her content amassed over one billion views across platforms during this period, making her one of the most searched performers on sites like Pornhub by early 2015.[24] She adopted the stage name "Mia Khalifa" for her performances, combining her dog's name "Mia" with rapper Wiz Khalifa's surname to enhance marketability and capitalize on her Lebanese heritage for an exotic appeal.[25] Regarding compensation, Khalifa has stated she earned around $12,000 total from her initial scenes at a rate of about $1,000 per shoot, though Bang Bros has disputed this figure, claiming payments exceeding $178,000 to her and affiliates, along with contract renewal offers indicating sustained involvement beyond her reported three-month tenure.[26] [27]

Notable Scenes and Immediate Backlash

Khalifa's brief tenure in adult films, spanning approximately three months in late 2014, included around a dozen scenes, but one produced by Bang Bros featuring her in a hijab during explicit acts—depicting a teacher-student dynamic with elements evoking schoolgirl attire—drove her rapid fame and controversy. Released in October 2014, the video portrayed her speaking Arabic phrases and engaging in acts perceived by critics as mocking Islamic religious symbols and authority figures.[28][29] This content spread virally on platforms like Pornhub, propelling her to the top-searched performer globally within weeks, despite her limited output.[30][31] The scene elicited immediate backlash from Muslim communities, particularly in Lebanon, where clerics condemned it as a desecration of the hijab, a garment symbolizing modesty in Islam, issuing religious edicts against her.[32] Online abuse flooded her social media, branding her a "disgrace to Islam," while the video's Arabic elements amplified perceptions of cultural betrayal.[29] By December 2014, extremists linked to ISIS escalated threats, posting images of her head on a pike and a photoshopped beheading, alongside a Google Maps pin of her apartment, prompting her to hide in a hotel for two weeks out of fear for her safety.[21][33] Her family, rooted in Lebanon's conservative Shiite Muslim tradition, publicly disavowed her within weeks of the scenes' release, severing contact and leaving her isolated amid the global scrutiny.[34][35] This familial rejection compounded personal distress, as the backlash highlighted clashes between her Westernized background and Lebanese heritage, without yet involving broader financial or industry-wide reflections.[36]

Financial Realities and Contractual Disputes

Khalifa entered into a long-term contract with Bang Bros in early 2015, committing to perform in multiple adult films each month, which the studio later cited as evidence of sustained engagement beyond her initial claims of a brief stint.[37] The agreement included provisions for contract extensions, which Bang Bros asserted were renewed, contributing to payments exceeding $178,000 from the company and its affiliates alone, according to their public statement disputing Khalifa's narrative.[27] [38] Khalifa, however, maintained that her total direct earnings from adult film production amounted to approximately $12,000 over three months, based on her tax reports and bank statements, with roughly $1,000 per scene as standard contractor pay.[26] She acknowledged larger sums wired to her agent but described over $160,000 as unaccounted for in her personal finances, attributing discrepancies to intermediary fees or unfulfilled obligations rather than personal receipt.[39] This conflict highlights broader industry practices where performers often relinquish control over content distribution post-production, with studios retaining leverage through exclusive contracts that limit renegotiation.[40] Compounding the initial compensation issues, Khalifa received no residuals or royalties from the perpetual online availability of her scenes, despite generating substantial ongoing revenue for platforms like Pornhub, where she ranked among the most-viewed performers as of 2019.[22] Standard industry contracts, as exemplified in her case, treat scenes as work-for-hire without backend profit-sharing, allowing studios and aggregators to monetize views indefinitely while performers forgo future income streams.[41] In response to these revenue limitations, Khalifa shifted to webcam modeling after exiting her Bang Bros contract, citing it as a means to capture direct fan payments and bypass studio intermediaries, though she reported only modest supplemental earnings of around $5,000 from such activities during her active period.[42] This transition underscored the exploitative asymmetry in traditional adult film economics, where upfront payments fail to reflect long-term value extraction by content owners.[43]

Exit from Pornography

Motivations for Departure

Khalifa entered the adult film industry on an impulsive basis in late 2014, prompted by a customer's suggestion while she worked at a fast-food restaurant, without any preconceived long-term commitment.[44][2] She later characterized this decision as a "rebellious impulse," reflecting a momentary defiance rather than a career choice, and performed only a handful of scenes before withdrawing in early 2015 after approximately three months.[2] Her departure was driven by mounting personal discomfort and external pressures, including family disapproval from her conservative Lebanese upbringing, which instilled a sense of shame over the work.[45] A pivotal factor was a controversial scene involving a hijab, into which she reported feeling pressured by producers intent on exploiting her Arabic heritage, leading to ethical reservations and her refusal of further similar content.[46][47] This video's virality amplified unwanted fame, invading her privacy and serving as a stark "reality check" on the industry's permanence.[48][49] Escalating threats, including death threats from ISIS targeting her for desecrating religious symbols in the hijab scene, intensified the urgency to exit, as she prioritized safety amid the backlash.[50][51] Following her quit, efforts to return to ordinary employment, such as retail roles, proved unfeasible due to widespread recognition, which hindered reintegration into pre-industry normalcy and reinforced the decision's irreversibility.[52][53]

Long-Term Personal and Professional Repercussions

Khalifa has stated that her brief involvement in adult films during three months in 2015 continues to profoundly impact her life, with the videos remaining indelibly online despite her repeated requests for removal. Having waived ownership rights through contractual agreements, she lacks legal authority to compel sites to delete the original content, which persists without providing her any royalties or control.[52][54][55] This permanence has fueled ongoing online and in-person harassment, including physical assaults such as being grabbed in grocery stores or followed to her car, often justified by assailants citing her past work as implying public access to her body. Verbal abuse escalates when she declines interactions, with incidents like being publicly insulted at airports after long flights.[56][57] The associated mental health toll has required nine years of therapy for Khalifa to address trauma and make autonomous decisions unclouded by her industry's aftermath, which she has described as the worst period of her life marked by exploitation and regret.[58][59][60] Professionally, the stigma manifests in stalled opportunities, such as job interviews where recognition of her past leads to abrupt conversational halts and rejections, complicating transitions to conventional employment like paralegal roles. Efforts to rebrand or pursue unrelated fields are hindered by inevitable associations with the videos, forcing reliance on personas inextricably linked to her prior notoriety.[52][61][14] Legal disputes underscore performers' limited recourse, as seen in 2020 when BangBros issued a cease-and-desist to Khalifa after her accusations of unauthorized promotion of her image, countering with claims she earned over $178,000 and renewing her contract voluntarily. Petitions by supporters to erase her videos gained millions of signatures but failed against original consensual content hosted under studio rights.[62][38][63]

Reflections on the Adult Industry

Khalifa's Critiques of Exploitation and Predation

Khalifa has described the adult film industry's contracts as predatory mechanisms designed to ensnare inexperienced participants, recounting how she signed a deal without adequate review or legal counsel during her brief involvement in late 2014.[21] She emphasized that producers exploit vulnerabilities by rushing agreements that lock performers into perpetual revenue streams from content, while performers receive minimal upfront compensation—Khalifa herself earned approximately $12,000 across her dozen scenes, despite the videos generating millions in ongoing profits for studios.[52] Inadequate on-set safeguards compounded this, as she reported dissociating or "blacking out" during filming due to discomfort and pressure, with no apparent intervention from production teams.[64] Rejecting narratives framing participation as empowering or liberating, Khalifa has repeatedly characterized her entry as a product of systematic conditioning rather than informed choice, attributing it to low self-esteem and external influences like an unstable relationship at age 21.[65] She has critiqued post-production alterations and marketing tactics that amplified exploitative elements, such as emphasizing her Arabic heritage in scenes intended to capitalize on cultural taboos, which she later identified as deliberate predation rather than consensual fantasy. These experiences led her to disavow any redemptive "empowerment" rhetoric, arguing it masks the causal reality of long-term psychological harm and loss of agency over one's image.[66] In public warnings to prospective performers, Khalifa has stressed the irreversible reputational and emotional damage, advising young women against entering the field prematurely due to its toxic dynamics and the difficulty of escaping perpetual online exposure. She has expressed deep regret over her brief porn career, stating her 11 videos "will haunt me until I die" and emphasizing that the industry makes regrets impossible to rectify.[67] She draws parallels to trafficking-like coercion in how the industry preys on callow individuals, trapping them via legal and financial dependencies that prioritize studio profits over participant welfare, and advocates outright avoidance over internal reforms.[2] Khalifa has expressed personal shame and disdain for her archived content, viewing it as a persistent source of predation that undermines future opportunities regardless of one's exit timeline. She has also spoken about being slut-shamed and facing derogatory comments when rejecting advances, attributing this to public feelings of entitlement to her body due to her past porn appearances.[68]

Broader Implications for Industry Practices

The adult entertainment industry's business model often exploits short-term participation by performers for enduring revenue streams, as content generated during brief engagements—such as three-month stints—continues to generate profits indefinitely through digital distribution and licensing, irrespective of performers' subsequent welfare or consent revocation attempts.[2] This structure incentivizes recruitment of novices with promises of quick financial gains, while externalizing long-term costs like reputational damage and psychological trauma onto individuals, as evidenced by cases where performers forfeit rights to their material upon entry, rendering post-exit removal legally challenging.[54] Empirical analyses reveal that such practices correlate with elevated health risks, including substance abuse and unprotected acts, which performers report as normalized to meet production demands.[69] A stark illustration of these dynamics is the unchecked proliferation of non-consensual deepfakes and revenge porn, where approximately 96% of circulating deepfake content is pornographic, superimposing performers' likenesses into new material without permission, perpetuating exploitation even after voluntary departure from the industry. This phenomenon underscores causal pathways from initial profit-driven filming to algorithmic amplification, where platforms prioritize engagement over verification, amplifying harms like cyberstalking and identity erosion for former participants. Data on performer outcomes counter narratives framing the industry as inherently empowering, showing significantly higher rates of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression, and suicidality among ex-performers compared to demographically similar non-performers; for instance, one study of filmed individuals reported alarmingly elevated PTSD, dissociation, self-harm, and mental health challenges.[70] [71] These patterns extend to systemic links with addiction and trafficking, where economic coercion funnels vulnerable individuals into production, often via substances to sustain compliance, mirroring broader sex trafficking indicators like debt bondage and repeated exploitation documented in over 69% of analyzed cases involving sexual commodification.[72] Industry profitability—estimated at tens of billions annually—relies on this churn, disregarding longitudinal welfare data that highlight clusters of suicides, such as five performer deaths by suicide or overdose within 12 weeks in late 2017 to early 2018, which signal untreated trauma from profit-optimized environments over performer longevity.[73] Prioritizing such empirical evidence over ideological assertions of autonomy reveals a causal realism wherein unchecked incentives foster predation, necessitating reforms like mandatory performer protections and content expiration protocols to mitigate perpetual harms.[74]

Subsequent Professional Ventures

Media Commentary and Influencer Roles

Following her departure from the adult film industry in early 2015, Khalifa transitioned into sports media commentary, leveraging her enthusiasm for professional athletics, particularly hockey and basketball. In October 2017, she co-hosted Out of Bounds, a daily YouTube series on Complex News, alongside former NBA player Gilbert Arenas, where the program examined the cultural dimensions of major sports leagues such as the NFL, NBA, and NHL.[75] The show ran until February 2018, after which Khalifa moved to co-host Sportsball with podcaster Tyler Coe, focusing on in-depth discussions of sports events and player dynamics.[76] Khalifa expanded her media presence through podcasting on Playboy's digital platform starting around 2019, producing content that blended sports analysis with pop culture insights until the arrangement concluded in 2023.[77] These roles highlighted her adaptation to mainstream commentary, drawing on her personal fandom—such as vocal support for the Washington Capitals NHL team—while navigating public perceptions tied to her prior career.[78] Parallel to these gigs, Khalifa cultivated a substantial influencer profile on social media, amassing over 26 million Instagram followers and 40 million on TikTok by 2024, which she monetized through sponsored posts and brand partnerships unrelated to adult content.[37] This digital growth enabled revenue streams from endorsements in fashion, gaming, and lifestyle sectors, underscoring her pivot toward non-explicit content creation and audience engagement.[79]

Modeling, Content Creation, and Entrepreneurship

Khalifa's primary post-pornography income derives from subscription-based content platforms, including OnlyFans, and webcam modeling, which, alongside sponsored influencer partnerships, constitute the bulk of her estimated $8 million net worth as of 2025.[37][79] As of February 2026, she is active on OnlyFans at onlyfans.com/miakhalifa, posting daily exclusive content encompassing lifestyle, fashion, and personal material; some sources indicate sexually explicit content as well. The subscription is priced at $12 per month, with promotions available.[80][81] These streams leverage her online following, generating revenue through fan subscriptions and tips.[82] In July 2023, Khalifa co-founded the jewelry and bodywear brand Sheytan—translating to "devil" in Arabic—with business partner Sara Burn, offering products like crystal waist chains, necklaces, and underwear aimed at empowering self-expression.[83][84] The line emphasizes unapologetic aesthetics, with items such as the "Sheytan" necklace and postcard packs marketed via social media to her audience.[85] Khalifa has expanded into fashion modeling through collaborations with brands including Heaven by Marc Jacobs, Shoreditch Ski Club, Y/Project, and Di Petsa, featuring in campaigns, editorials, and runway appearances like the Di Petsa FW25 show at London Fashion Week in February 2025, Peachy Den's Fall/Winter 2025 campaign in December 2025, and returning to the runway for Palestinian label Trashy Clothing during its debut at Paris Fashion Week AW26 in March 2026. These deals position her as an influencer in streetwear and high fashion, capitalizing on her visibility for promotional endorsements without explicit elements.[86][87][88][89] Additionally, in December 2025, Khalifa shared her top 10 movies of the year in GQ magazine, underscoring her interest as a cinephile and cultural commentator. Her content creation extends to YouTube, where channels under her name amass hundreds of thousands of subscribers through videos on daily life and reflections, complemented by podcast guest spots addressing personal development, self-esteem recovery, and industry exit lessons.[90][91] This branding fosters a narrative of resilience and reinvention, driving ancillary earnings from ad revenue and merchandise ties.[92]

Political Engagement and Controversies

Positions on the Israel-Palestine Conflict

Following the Hamas-led attacks on Israel on October 7, 2023, Khalifa publicly endorsed the militants' actions by referring to them as "freedom fighters" and urging them via X (formerly Twitter) to "flip their phones and film horizontal" while documenting the assaults, a statement widely interpreted as celebratory of the violence that killed approximately 1,200 Israelis.[93][94] This post, which aligned Palestinian militants with "resistance" against Israel, prompted immediate professional repercussions, including termination of her podcasting contract with Playboy on October 10, 2023, for what the company described as "disgusting and reprehensible comments celebrating Hamas' attacks."[95][96] Khalifa has consistently characterized Israel's military responses in Gaza as "genocidal," echoing anti-Zionist critiques by labeling the state an "apartheid" entity engaged in settler colonialism and questioning its legitimacy through references to the 1917 Balfour Declaration as a foundational injustice.[97][98] In January 2024, she voiced support for South Africa's International Court of Justice case accusing Israel of genocide, asserting that "genocide has been live streamed" in reference to Gaza operations that Palestinian health authorities reported had killed over 24,000 by that date.[99] She has also derided Israeli figures, such as actress Gal Gadot, as "Genocide Barbie" in response to pro-Israel statements amid the conflict.[100][98] Her advocacy intensified in 2024 amid Israel's escalations with Hezbollah in Lebanon, where she expressed personal heartbreak over bombardments in her native country, linking her views to familial roots in Beirut displaced by earlier conflicts like the 2006 Israel-Hezbollah war.[101][33] In March 2025, following the Academy Award win for the pro-Palestinian documentary No Other Land, which critiques Israeli settlement policies, Khalifa amplified calls for recognition of the film's portrayal of occupation dynamics, contrasting it with perceived censorship of anti-Israel narratives.[102] These positions, drawn from her Lebanese heritage and public social media activity, have fueled debates over their alignment with Hamas rhetoric while drawing scrutiny for overlooking the group's charter and tactics, as noted in analyses questioning selective anti-Israel framing over broader Palestinian governance issues.[103][104]

Domestic Political Views and Sponsorship Losses

Khalifa has expressed strong opposition to the Biden administration, stating in a September 2024 interview that she "despises" the U.S. government, particularly citing its foreign policy decisions as a key factor.[105] She has publicly criticized President Biden's age and Israel policy on social media, framing it as emblematic of broader governmental failures.[106] These sentiments align with her broader domestic political commentary, including vocal opposition to perceived anti-vaccination stances among parents and support for critiquing authoritarian regimes, as seen in her amplification of protests against the Cuban government in July 2021.[107][108] In social justice discussions, Khalifa has highlighted perceived biases in Western media framing, notably scrutinizing terminology distinctions such as "prisoners" versus "hostages" in conflict reporting, which she monitors closely to identify ideological leanings among commentators.[109] This critique reflects her engagement with domestic debates on media narratives and free speech, where she argues U.S. political leaders prioritize foreign defenses over American rights.[110] These views contributed to professional repercussions, including the termination of her podcasting contract with Playboy in October 2023, following social media posts that Playboy described as promoting hate speech.[111][112] Similarly, Canadian broadcaster Todd Shapiro ended a podcast deal with her on the same day, citing her comments as "disgusting" and incompatible with his platform's standards.[113][114] The losses were attributed by the involved parties to the radical tone of her expressions, amid heightened scrutiny of public figures' political statements.[115][116]

Responses to Accusations of Extremism

Khalifa responded to initial backlash over her October 7, 2023, social media post urging "freedom fighters in Palestine" to film horizontally by clarifying on October 9 that the remark did not incite violence and referred to Palestinian civilians fighting for freedom daily, distinguishing it from endorsement of specific acts.[96] She framed her stance as solidarity with oppressed peoples globally, citing personal experiences of Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) airstrikes in Lebanon during her childhood, and dismissed critics like radio host Peter Rosenberg as privileged and uninformed about regional realities.[96] Supporters of Khalifa portrayed her comments as principled opposition to Israeli policies, equating criticism of her views with tolerance for what they described as imperial aggression and disproportionate responses in Gaza, where over 40,000 Palestinian deaths were reported by local health authorities amid the ensuing conflict.[104] They argued that labeling her support for Palestinian resistance as extremism stifles legitimate anti-colonial discourse, drawing parallels to historical liberation struggles and accusing detractors of conflating anti-Zionism with anti-Semitism to shield state actions.[104] Opponents countered that Khalifa's language exceeded standard advocacy by appearing to celebrate the Hamas-led attacks of October 7, which killed approximately 1,200 Israelis, mostly civilians, through methods including mass shootings and sexual violence, as documented in UN and forensic reports. They emphasized Hamas's designation as a terrorist organization by the U.S. State Department since 1997, citing its charter's calls for Israel's destruction and history of targeting non-combatants via suicide bombings and rocket fire, which empirically crosses into apologism for atrocities rather than mere political critique. Such defenses, critics maintained, risk normalizing groups responsible for civilian deaths on both sides, including Hamas's use of human shields in Gaza as verified by multiple intelligence assessments. Platform repercussions, including her termination from Playboy's creator program on October 10, 2023, for "disgusting and reprehensible comments celebrating Hamas' attacks," and loss of a Canadian podcast deal, were interpreted by Khalifa's allies as evidence of corporate overreach enforcing pro-Israel orthodoxy amid advertiser pressures.[117] [94] Detractors viewed these as accountability measures against content endorsing violence, noting Playboy's statement highlighted dehumanization of victims, and argued that private entities' decisions reflect market rejection of extremism rather than censorship.[117] No formal legal actions ensued, though the episode underscored tensions between free speech and liability for inflammatory rhetoric on designated terrorist groups.[118]

Personal Life and Identity

Relationships and Marital History

Khalifa married her high school boyfriend, Wyatt O'Brien, in February 2011 at the age of 18; the couple separated in 2014, coinciding with her entry into the adult film industry, and finalized their divorce in 2016.[119][120] In 2018, she began a relationship with Swedish professional chef Robert Sandberg, announcing their engagement on March 14, 2019, and marrying on June 10, 2020, after delaying the ceremony due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[121][122] The marriage lasted less than a year before separation in late 2020, with Khalifa announcing the divorce on July 25, 2021, citing irreconcilable differences despite efforts to reconcile.[123][124] After her second divorce, Khalifa dated Puerto Rican singer Jhay Cortez, going Instagram official in November 2021; the relationship ended around mid-2022, marked by public unfollows and subtle social media criticisms from both parties.[125][126] Khalifa has maintained a low profile regarding recent romantic partnerships, denying rumors of involvement with soccer player Julián Álvarez in November 2024 and reiterating she is single as of early 2026.[127] She has attributed challenges in sustaining relationships to the persistent effects of her public persona, including difficulties building trust and vetting partners amid constant scrutiny and opportunistic attention.[128][129] As of February 2026, Khalifa has no children.

Religious Evolution and Cultural Identity

Mia Khalifa was raised in a conservative Catholic family of Lebanese Christian descent in Beirut, where religious observance formed a core part of her early upbringing before her family relocated to the United States around age ten.[5] Following her brief involvement in the adult film industry in 2014–2015, which provoked significant familial backlash due to cultural and religious norms, her parents publicly disowned her and ceased communication, citing the irreconcilable shame to their conservative values.[130][131] This rift underscored tensions between her assimilated American lifestyle and inherited Lebanese traditions, prompting a personal reevaluation of faith. By 2015, Khalifa explicitly stated she was no longer a practicing Catholic, marking a shift toward secularism amid the personal and public fallout from her career choices.[5] She has since expressed skepticism toward organized religion, notably criticizing adult conversions to "hyper-religiosity" as indicative of low intelligence rather than genuine enlightenment, and mocking those who adopt fervent faith later in life as seeking crutches for personal failings.[132][133] Despite this distancing, she has occasionally affirmed a nominal Catholic identity in defensive responses to critics, without evidence of formal reversion or conversion to another faith.[134] Khalifa maintains pride in her Lebanese heritage, evidenced by her 2016 tattoo of the Lebanese Forces Cross—a symbol tied to Lebanon's Christian militias and cultural resistance—while navigating assimilation into U.S. society through secular pursuits like modeling and commentary.[135] Over time, she reconciled with her family through therapy and "radical empathy," addressing internalized conflicts without restoring prior religious observance, thus blending cultural roots with a privatized, non-dogmatic identity.[136] This evolution reflects a causal prioritization of individual autonomy over institutional faith, informed by backlash experiences rather than doctrinal shifts.

Reception and Legacy

Achievements in Diversification and Advocacy

Following her departure from the adult film industry in 2015, Khalifa diversified into social media influencing, amassing over 28 million Instagram followers by 2025 through content on lifestyle, fitness, and personal branding.[137] This platform enabled partnerships generating significant earned media value, estimated at $7.8 million for brands via influencer marketing metrics.[86] Her entrepreneurial ventures include launching Sheytan, a demi-fine jewelry and bodywear brand in July 2023, positioned as an exclusive, limited-run line designed between London and Miami, emphasizing self-assured aesthetics.[84] These efforts contributed to an estimated net worth of $8 million by 2025, derived from subscriptions, sponsored posts, and brand collaborations rather than past industry residuals.[37][79] Khalifa's advocacy against exploitative practices in pornography has highlighted industry harms, drawing from her own experience of a brief, viral stint that led to persistent privacy loss and non-consensual distribution.[138] She pursued legal action in 2023 against websites hosting unauthorized content featuring her image, advancing broader discussions on performer rights and consent in digital media.[3] Her public testimonies, including interviews detailing impulsive entry and subsequent regret, have been cited in analyses of predatory contracts and residuals withholding, influencing anti-exploitation narratives without reliance on industry earnings.[139][2] On Middle Eastern issues, Khalifa leveraged her audience to amplify Lebanese voices post-2020 Beirut explosion, directing international attention to humanitarian needs and cultural preservation efforts.[140] This included fundraising and platforming local causes, demonstrating reinvention from stigma to constructive influence amid ongoing regional challenges.

Criticisms, Stigmatization, and Cultural Debates

Khalifa has faced accusations of opportunism for leveraging her brief adult film career—lasting three months in 2014 and comprising about a dozen scenes—for sustained public relevance, despite repeatedly expressing regrets over the experience as an "impulsive act of rebellion" that led to exploitation and privacy loss. Critics, including online commentators, argue she maintains the "Mia Khalifa" pseudonym tied to her pornographic persona for branding in modeling, sports commentary, and social media, where her 26 million Instagram followers largely stem from viral adult content views exceeding billions on platforms like Pornhub, while decrying the industry's predatory nature and demanding removal of her videos. This perceived hypocrisy is compounded by her advocacy against pornography's harms, such as non-consensual dissemination, yet her fame's causal roots in those same materials enable her diversification into non-explicit ventures, fueling claims that she selectively invokes victimhood to distance herself without fully severing ties to the notoriety that propelled her.[52][2][141] Stigmatization has been acute within Arab and Muslim communities, where her videos, particularly a 2014 scene involving a hijab, provoked widespread outrage for desecrating religious symbols and cultural norms, resulting in death threats from ISIS affiliates, clerical fatwas in Lebanon, and familial estrangement. Lebanese media and officials condemned her as tarnishing national image, with petitions demanding government intervention against the content's distribution, highlighting tensions between individual agency in Western contexts and collectivist expectations of modesty in origin cultures. This backlash underscores persistent objectification, as Khalifa reports ongoing harassment and professional barriers, including difficulty securing conventional employment due to employers' associations with her past, even a decade later.[16][142][48] Her case exemplifies broader cultural debates on pornography's enduring digital legacies, where short-term participation yields inescapable online footprints resistant to erasure efforts, as content proliferates via unauthorized uploads despite performer requests for takedowns. Empirical patterns in the industry reveal that viral performers like Khalifa—whose hijab scene alone garnered over 1 billion views—face disproportionate, permanent scrutiny compared to longer-career peers, raising causal questions about consent's post-production limits in an era of infinite reproducibility. Debates contrast her narrative of industry predation, including coerced elements like the hijab motif exploiting her Lebanese heritage, against critiques viewing her choices as autonomous yet amplified by market demand for taboo ethnic fetishes, without evidence of systemic coercion beyond standard contract imbalances.[138][2][47]

References

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