Lily Phillips, a British adult content creator who previously made headlines for sleeping with 100 men in a single day (honestly heartbreaking), recently gave an interview to the BBC.
In the discussion, Phillips revealed that she began watching pornography at the age of 11, stating she "always thought it was very normal."
Watch:

During the interview, the BBC reporter asked Phillips how her consumption of adult content had shaped her brain and influenced her perspective on sex. Phillips responded that it made her "really sex confident," describing it as the way she learned her "craft," and claiming it's had an overall positive impact on her.

Now, I'm no clinical expert in relational health — but let's be honest, that claim doesn't hold water. Numerous studies have shown that heavy pornography use often does the opposite: distorting people's views of sex, damaging emotional intimacy, and undermining spiritual and mental well-being.
The reporter followed up with a sharp question, pointing to how widespread porn use has become among younger generations — especially with smartphones in nearly every hand — and asked whether this points to a failure by politicians, tech companies, and even parents.
Phillips responded by saying that sex is just a normal part of life and added, kids should start learning about it at that age - but "maybe not learning from pornography."
The real effects:
Lesson of the day: don't take advice about the benefits of adult content from someone who literally makes millions selling it. That's like asking a car salesman if you should buy a car.
Of course they're going to say yes!
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