In the age of artificial intelligence, some fear job loss. Others moon the threat directly—literally.
What started as a tongue-in-cheek response to AI fearmongering has now turned into a serious business for one male developer who pivoted from shipping code to selling cheek.
He’s not the first to monetize desperation. But he may be the first to do it with a mix of squats, cross-dressing, early-2000s creep energy, and a well-organized leg day split.
“If They’re Gonna Threaten My Job, They Deserve to Be Mooned”
The developer—anonymous for now—was active in dev circles on X, and found himself bombarded with the usual hot takes:
“GPT-5 will make most devs obsolete!”
“No need to learn code—just prompt the AI.”
“Software is the next factory floor.”
In response, he launched an OnlyFans. The message?
“If you’re going to threaten my job, you deserve to be mooned.”
His original plan was half-joke, half-performance art: a chaotic blend of butts, creepiness, cross-dressing, and edgy throwback aesthetics from his early 20s. But over time, the joke faded—and the gains grew.
From Panic to Profit
He hit the gym. Hard.
No skipped leg days.
Ashwagandha and turkesterone for strength and hormones.
MSM and collagen for joint health and recovery.
Content output went up. So did subscribers. Now he’s running it like a real business.
He uses his physique as a product. His dev brain for content ops.
And his AI fear as fuel.
He’s not alone. A growing number of people—especially men—are turning to platforms like OnlyFans not just out of lust, but out of economic desperation. When the narrative says “Your job won’t exist soon,” people look for what can.
In this case: butt pics, high testosterone, and a Canon DSLR.
Don’t Try This at Home (Unless You’re Ripped)
Let’s be clear: this guy made it work.
But that doesn’t mean you will.
This isn’t financial advice, and it sure as hell isn’t career advice.
It’s a warning shot.
The better path for devs?
Use AI to increase productivity.
Use it to learn new frameworks, test ideas, debug code, and build MVPs faster.
Use it to cover weak spots, not to replace your core strengths.
The developer who fears AI and does nothing might indeed become obsolete.
The developer who adapts becomes irreplaceable.
Caution: Scare Tactics Backfire
The worst part of this story? The message it sends.
If you keep telling young men that dev work is dying, some of them will start mooning back.
We won’t get a world of machine overlords.
We’ll get a future of masculine butts.
And let me tell you—nobody has the server infrastructure for that.