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Her father died when she was about fifteen, and the takeaway she acted on was certainty: she already knew she wanted to be a lawyer and wanted to be sure she could afford it. So she tested four themed TikTok accounts through high school, applied to exactly one college — Carnegie Mellon, sabotaging every other application — and built the brand the day monetization made sense.
Twitch built the core fanbase; the format was re-teaching her professors' lectures live. A Playboy exclusive came with an internship she negotiated — she says she managed a recruitment team and left over benefits — then Fanfix, where the tiers are named "teacher's pet" and "teacher's assistant."
She scored a 172 on the LSAT and is in law school now, aiming at public-defender work: "I feel comfortable taking a job that's going to pay pretty shit... because of this money." Her thesis about the whole industry is one sentence long: "it's not a person" won't beat a person.
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