Channel 4 viewers have issued complaints just minutes into a new tell-all documentary about controversial adult star Bonnie Blue
Bonnie Blue has made her TV debut with a new Channel 4 documentary, and viewers are fuming about the X-rated film.
The adult content creator set the internet on fire when she slept with 1,057 men back in January. Bonnie, whose real name is Tia Billinger, has now taken fans behind the scenes of the controversial stunt.
In the new programme, titled 1000 Men and Me: The Bonnie Blue Story, she is followed by a film crew who capture her day-to-day life.
According to the synopsis, the film goes “behind the headlines, clickbait and rage bait to discover what life’s really like in Bonnie’s wild orbit, how she got here and what’s really going on behind those steely blue eyes.”
It also “explores the central question polarising debate about her: Is she a ‘dangerous predator’, pandering to male fantasies and perpetuating the patriarchy? Or an empowered, sex positive, businesswoman having the last laugh?”
While its questions aim to cut deep, the film features divisive scenes of sex acts between Bonnie and a series of men. It also includes footage of the 26-year-old stark naked and scenes of her filming porn videos with other adult stars.
As viewers have tuned into the tell-all film, many have issued complaints just minutes into the one-off programme.
“”Literally 3 seconds in and Bonnie Blue is already disgusting,” penned one X, formerly Twitter, user.
A second voiced their disbelief: “No way there’s a documentary on Channel 4 about Bonnie Blue loooooool.”
Meanwhile a third penned: “Why the hell is Channel 4 showing a documentary about Bonnie Blue….1000 Men & Me,” to which someone else replied: “1.5 hours long!! Ridiculous.”
Ahead of its release Director Victoria Silver explained why explicit scenes were important for this documentary.
She said: “If I was making a film about a musician or some other kind of performer, their work would be in there. I think it’s really important to see what she does.”
Channel 4’s commissioning editor, Tim Hancock, also addressed the film’s controversial subject matter.
“I believe it is Channel 4’s job to tell stories like this that are at the edge of modern morality,” he said. “I commissioned this documentary because Bonnie is the tip of a huge iceberg.
“Since the pandemic there has been a cultural shift in the acceptability of creating adult content and the types of people do it.”
1000 Men and Me: The Bonnie Blue Story is available to stream on Channel 4
Source: Celebrities - dailystar.co.uk