Skip to main content
Advertisement
Coffee
Pop Culture

Creator CEO Claps Back at Neighbors' OnlyFans Complaints

Ava HartAuthor
Published
Reading time2 min
Share:
Ava Hart's Hollywood 360

When your day job involves running a content creation empire, apparently your address becomes negotiable real estate in the court of public opinion. Creators Inc. CEO Andy Bachman is learning that lesson the hard way—or, depending on your perspective, he’s not learning it at all, because he’s pushing back just as hard as his neighbors are complaining.

The situation is pretty straightforward on paper: some anonymous residents in the neighborhood say Bachman’s throwing lavish mansion parties that are overflowing with scantily clad guests, substances, and what they claim is on-the-spot OnlyFans content creation. One neighbor told KTLA about seeing“scantily clad women, almost half-naked”and people“smoking marijuana in front of our home.”Another told NBC 4 Los Angeles that the aftermath looks like a college dorm exploded—beer bottles, trash, and used condoms left behind on their property.

Here’s where it gets interesting: Bachman isn’t denying the parties. He’s denying the narrative. In a direct response on Instagram, he essentially said,“If you’ve got a problem, call me”—not in a threatening way, but in a“let’s have a conversation like adults”way. To TMZ, he went further, claiming the neighborhood has never actually filed violations against him, which suggests the facts might not align with the anonymous complaints. He also made a broader point: that the creator economy is a legitimate business and that people shouldn’t substitute assumptions for evidence just because they don’t understand someone’s profession.

The wrinkle that might actually matter more than the parties themselves? Some neighbors aren’t upset about the content—they’re upset about the branding. The Creators Inc. logo in the window, labeled cars out front, the whole infrastructure that screams“this is a business, not a residence.”That’s a zoning and usage question that goes beyond whether someone’s throwing a rager on a Saturday night.

Bachman’s right about one thing: good neighbors do talk directly. But he’s also operating in a space where OnlyFans still carries stigma for some, and where a mansion party filmed for digital content feels like something new and threatening to people who aren’t plugged into creator culture. The disconnect isn’t really about beer bottles or noise. It’s about a fundamental clash between old-school neighborhood expectations and the new economy happening right next door.

Ava Hart's Hollywood 360

About the Author

Ava Hart

Ava Hart is a contributor to LocalBeat, covering local news and community stories.

Share:

Related Stories