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String of OnlyFans models 'duped' after signing up for Hunted-style reality show

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The models were told the show, called Survivor, would be streamed on two major platforms
The models were told the show, called Survivor, would be streamed on two major platforms

A STRING of glamour girls say they were duped after signing up for a Hunted-style reality show.

The ten OnlyFans models were promised £850-a-day to appear in the “battle of the babes” contest as they tried to evade capture by a team of Special Forces vets.

Glamour girls say they were duped after signing up for a Hunted-style reality show - pictured Kayleigh Wanless qhiqhhiduizprw
Glamour girls say they were duped after signing up for a Hunted-style reality show - pictured Kayleigh Wanless
The women were sent contracts by self-proclaimed director Alfred McArthur, an Army veteran
The women were sent contracts by self-proclaimed director Alfred McArthur, an Army veteran
They were told the show, called Survivor, would be streamed on Amazon, Netflix and in the US on The Weather Channel
They were told the show, called Survivor, would be streamed on Amazon, Netflix and in the US on The Weather Channel

But the project was axed and they claim they are out of pocket after forking out for training, and fear they were used to get access to their social media followings.

The women were sent contracts by self-proclaimed director Alfred McArthur, an Army veteran.

They were told the show, called Survivor, would be streamed on Amazon, Netflix and in the US on The Weather Channel.

From tongue scraping to saying no, here are 12 health trends to try in 2023From tongue scraping to saying no, here are 12 health trends to try in 2023

But they feared the worst when a red carpet event in January was axed — before the show was pulled.

McArthur denies it was a scam and says he was in talks with networks via a US producer.

Playboy star Kayleigh Wanless, 32, who has 15,000 subscribers to her OnlyFans page, said: “It was just a fantasy that has hurt a lot of women.”

Kayleigh, of Newcastle, said McArthur got nasty when the models became suspicious.

She added: “He said there were loads of women he could get to do it and we were working with an American TV network now and not Babestation so we should be more professional.

“There were lots of red flags and toxic traits.

“That was when it hit us all that it was a hoax.”

Model Paige Starr, 35, said: “It is worrying someone can sell something like this as reality and it is a load of rubbish.”

McArthur, of Dunoon, Argyll and Bute, insisted: “Survivor was a real thing, it wasn’t fake.

“It got pulled roughly five weeks ago.

I want my girlfriend to try dirty talk but she won't do itI want my girlfriend to try dirty talk but she won't do it

“When the can was pulled, they went ape.

“They said they’d lost out on money, this, this and this.

“I was like, ‘Ladies, I told you this was going to happen’.

“Too many girls wanting this, wanting that.

“Stupid demands for a make-up artist.

“I cannot justify having a make-up artist with us, that’s just not going to happen and they knew that.”

Model Paige Starr said: 'It is worrying someone can sell something like this as reality and it is a load of rubbish'
Model Paige Starr said: 'It is worrying someone can sell something like this as reality and it is a load of rubbish'Credit: Supplied

Rachel Dale

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