She streams herself playing video games in low-cut tops to 1.5 million followers while offering sexually explicit content on OnlyFans.
And according to the US government, Colombian-born Alinity Divine - real-name Natalia Mogollon - is deserving of the highly-coveted 'extraordinary' artist visa.
The 37-year-old was approved for an O-1B visa in August after lawyers cited her massive online reach.
Even as Donald Trump cracks down on almost every other form of immigration, for influencers and OnlyFans models, it turns out the border isn't so tough.
The lawyer who secured Alinity's visa represents a direct link to the program's origins.
Michael Wildes, of law firm Wildes & Weinberg, traces his legal pedigree back to his father, Leon Wildes, who successfully defended John Lennon and Yoko Ono when the Nixon administration sought to deport the Beatle in the 1970s.
That fight laid the groundwork for the modern O-1 visa, established in 1990 to award immigration status to foreigners with 'extraordinary ability' in the arts, sciences, education, business or athletics.
But the clientele has changed dramatically with the rise of social media.
Colombian-born Alinity Divine - real-name Natalia Mogollon - streams herself playing video games in low-cut tops to 1.5 million followers, while offering sexually explicit content on OnlyFans
Rachel Anderson, an Australian lifestyle blogger who posts about interior design, fashion and Amazon finds, was granted O-1 status after demonstrating millions of YouTube views
Wildes said his firm now works with 'tons of social media influencers' and has achieved enormous success with OnlyFans models.
'Though my wife doesn't really approve,' Wildes joked in an interview with the Florida Phoenix.
Immigration attorneys across the country say influencers now make up anywhere from half to 65 percent of their O-1B clientele, a dramatic change that accelerated after the pandemic pushed more people online.
The criteria for O-1Bs have been adapted to fit the digital age, with high follower counts demonstrating success and brand partnerships serving as endorsements.
'If you think about how many people are on social media every day and how few people actually make a living from it - it is really a skill,' Fiona McEntee, founding partner of the McEntee Law Group, told the Financial Times.
Not every influencer is quite so provocative.
Rachel Anderson, an Australian lifestyle blogger who posts about interior design, fashion and Amazon finds, was granted O-1 status after demonstrating millions of YouTube views.
Other influencers have turned their visa applications into content itself.
Viral TikTok boyband Boy Throb, known for performing in matching pink tracksuits, were advised by a lawyer that demonstrating large-scale public recognition would strengthen their case.
The group - whose fourth member, Darshan Magdum, had been participating virtually from India - urged followers to boost their videos.
They hit one million TikTok followers in just one month, smashing their target. Darshan is now applying for his visa.
But immigration lawyers say the surge has been driven as much by money as fame, with earnings routinely cited to prove 'extraordinary ability.'
Jacob Sapochnick, a San Diego-based immigration lawyer, said he was initially skeptical when approached by an OnlyFans creator in 2020.
'She said, "Let me show you the backend of my platform." I looked, and she was making $250,000 a month,' Sapochnick told the Florida Phoenix. 'I was like, oh my god. Okay. I can use that.'
He took her case. She became his first OnlyFans client to secure the visa. In the following two years, he represented influencers from China, Russia, and Canada -many fitness influencers also working on OnlyFans.
But the embrace of social media metrics has triggered a backlash from critics who warn the program's high standards are being diluted.
'We have scenarios where people who should never have been approved are getting approved for O-1s,' immigration lawyer Protima Daryanani told the Financial Times. 'It's been watered down because people are just meeting the categories.'
New York attorney Shervin Abachi warned that traditionally trained artists whose work doesn't benefit from algorithms will be disadvantaged as officials increasingly treat online reach as a proxy for merit.
'Officers are being handed petitions where value is framed almost entirely through algorithm-based metrics,' Abachi told the FT. 'Once that becomes normalized, the system moves toward treating artistic merit like a scoreboard.'
Elizabeth Jacobs, a former US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) adviser, said immigration officers risk conflating follower count and clicks with talent.
'These types of achievements are merely evidence of simply above-average talent, given the enormous volume of influencers or digital content creators out there in 2025,' she told the Florida Phoenix.
The rise of influencer visas comes as Trump has imposed some of the strictest immigration enforcement in modern American history, with mass deportations and new barriers even for tourists.
Last year, the administration imposed a $100,000 one-time fee on H-1B specialty worker visas amid fury from Trump's MAGA base over large numbers of foreign workers, particularly from India, entering the tech sector.
But the O-1 category operates differently. Unlike most visa programs, it has no cap, giving immigration officers broad latitude to determine who qualifies as 'extraordinary.'
According to the State Department, fewer than 20,000 O-1 visas were issued last year - a tiny fraction of overall visa approvals. But that total has risen by more than 50 percent in the last decade, with the steepest increases coming after 2020.
The growth has fueled criticism that visas are going to social media stars rather than exceptional artists, with immigration attorneys simply spotting 'winnable' cases based on easily quantifiable metrics.
When asked whether OnlyFans models were receiving preferential treatment, the US government pushed back firmly.
'USCIS is not prioritizing applications for the site in question,' a spokesman told the Daily Mail. 'Reports suggesting otherwise are absurd.'