Most of us spend our days stuck at a desk, but Katie Woolls ditched the 9-5 to work from the comfort of her London home.
Nowadays, the 27-year-old’s job sees her fulfilling some pretty niche sexual fantasies – like crushing a cake with her bare feet, which she was paid a tasty £381 for.
At 6ft 9in tall, Katie decided to monetise her height by creating Giantess content, leaving behind a career in tech sales in summer 2023 to become an OnlyFans creator.
Otherwise known as macrophilia, this fetish involves attraction to giants or sometimes giant objects. And the creator’s new venture fully leans into the popular kink, which was the most searched fetish of 2023 and has nearly one billion video views on TikTok.
‘People want me to role play as though I’m 40ft tall and I crush them,’ Katie tells Metro. ‘I have to set my camera up on the floor and film myself from below trampling things. I’ve had to order a ton of mini houses and cars and trample a small village in work boots.’
That roleplay earned her £228, and (although she doesn’t feel safe discussing her exact finances) she now makes a ‘comfortable’ UK salary from content based around her height.
There are a wide range of requests though: one client wanted to roleplay being a tiny man with Katie swallowing him whole – a subset of the kink known as vore, where you get sexually aroused at the thought of being consumed.
Others ask to be humiliated, sending her pictures of their penises for critique.
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‘They like me to tell them how tiny it is and how it could never fulfil me because I’m so tall and they’re so small and pathetic,’ Katie explains.
‘Some men also want me to act out as if I’m carrying them like a baby and cradling them because I’m extremely strong and can use them, a fully grown man, as a rag doll.’
Katie’s dad is average height, but her mum is 6ft 2in, which is where she gets her stature from. Despite the fact it now pays her bills though, she didn’t always see being tall as a blessing.
She recalls: ‘Even by nursery it was apparent I was very tall. I watch old videos of me in school assemblies and I look like I’m two year groups above my peers. I’ve literally been head and shoulders above everyone else since I can remember.’
‘I struggled to fit under desks and on coaches for school trips I needed two seats – teachers also expected me to be more athletic, which I wasn’t.’
The 'Giantess' kink is the height of horniness
This fetish isn’t new by any stretch, we see it in popular culture in TV series like The Boys and Gen V, as well as games like Resident Evil, all have scenes or plots which could satisfy the Giantess kink.
And lest we forget, Taylor Swift’s Giantess alter-ego or the ‘monster on the hill’ in her hit music video for Anti Hero, or childhood movies like Honey I Shrunk The Kids and The Burrowers.
Sex expert Ness Cooper told Metro: ‘Throughout time there has been an obsession with giants, particularly strong dominant women who are tall or large. From the Amazonian warriors to mythological Goddesses, many have worshipped women who tower over buildings or are taller than the average cis-male.
‘For some, it’s simply a fetish of height. Generally, we see height fetish being spoken about between cis-women preferring men of a particular height. But with Giantess the focus is reversed.’
For many the person depicted as ‘tall or giant’ is usually the centre of the sexual fantasy for someone with this kink, but it does get more complex than that.
Ness explained: ‘Some may also focus specifically on large genitals and being consumed by them or entering them as smaller beings.’
But there aren’t that many giants around, so how do people actually engage fully in Macrophilia?
‘Many people in this fetish may explore images or clips that have been
edited to make one person appear as a giant,’ Ness said. ‘Another way is in a form of submission where the submissive person plays
a role pleasing their dominant, and in the process, they also spend a
lot of time crawling or worshipping from the floor.’
By 14, Katie had surpassed 6ft, and during those teenage years, she found that ‘boys were particularly mean’.
‘I was taller than every boy in every class, I was quite an outcast and it definitely affected me socially,’ she adds.
‘People would laugh or call me lanky, and I didn’t go on a date until almost 18 because I was so shy about my height. Even then I didn’t try and date anyone popular, so I went for someone shy or nerdy.’
Once Katie transitioned into the workplace, she began looking for a role that would allow her to spend more time with her family and Romanian rescue dog Buddy, as well as having more flexibility in terms of hours.
And after putting a couple of videos about finding clothes to fit tall women on Instagram , she tapped into an unexpected audience.
‘I filmed myself walking through a doorway in my house trying to show off my outfit, but very quickly my videos got traction with a male audience, so I thought why not monetise it on OnlyFans,’ Katie says.
The creator now charges her subscribers £7.99 a month to view her content, alongside one-off fees for specific requests. And money aside, she also ‘really enjoys’ being part of the Giantess community
‘I never even thought there would be any interest because it’s so normalised for men to prefer shorter women and I presumed that’s how it would be,’ she adds.
Katie doesn’t see it as a long term career though, explaining: ‘OnlyFans is amazing and it’s changed my life but I do want to do something else at some point because I don’t just want to feel like I’m objectified and people continuously have access to me for a monthly sum.’
This has also led to concerns for her safety, which is why she doesn’t talk much about money and never meets her subscribers in real life.
She continues: ‘Things can get quite bad quite quickly in the online world – there’s a lot of stalking and harassment – I’m not as thick-skinned as I should be in this job, so if something goes wrong it feels pretty catastrophic for me.
‘I’m quick to delete or block nasty comments, some people will do anything to bring you down.’
That said, for the time being, working as a Giantess is making Katie happy, and given her a confidence boost she wants to share with other tall women out there, too.
‘As someone who used to google height reduction surgery, I would say being unable to blend in can actually be used to your advantage – not everyone is going to be hateful or unkind,’ she says.
‘Radiate confidence and positivity, other people will pick up on that and be less inclined to bother you in the first place.’
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