OF Father–Son Duo Launch YouTube Podcast, Sparking Debate Over Family Boundaries
Source: X/Twitter

OF Father–Son Duo Launch YouTube Podcast, Sparking Debate Over Family Boundaries

READ TIME: 4 MIN.

A father and son who collaborate on OnlyFans content have launched their first joint YouTube video and podcast, widening an already intense public conversation about family boundaries and the sexualized creator economy.

The pair, identified in coverage as 41‑year‑old Dean Byrne and his 18‑year‑old son Bray Byrne from the United Kingdom, have drawn sustained attention for producing adult content side by side on OnlyFans and promoting it heavily on social media.

Dean had an established presence as an OnlyFans creator before Bray turned 18 and expressed interest in joining the platform and “following in his footsteps, ” according to reporting that cites Dean’s posts on X .

In a December post on X, Dean publicly confirmed that Bray is his son, writing that his son “came to me recently saying he wanted to start OF, ” adding that he initially tried to dissuade him but ultimately “took him under my wing” and asked followers to “please show your support and please be kind. ”

The new YouTube venture, titled “Daddy No, ” is framed as a podcast, and its first episode, “father son talks, ” runs around 15 minutes and features the two speaking casually on camera.

According to a detailed write‑up from student outlet The Tab, the episode features free‑flowing conversation without much structure as Dean and Bray discuss topics including dating apps, relationships, and their preferred sexual positions while seated side by side.

In one moment highlighted in that coverage, Dean asks Bray about his “body count, ” with Bray responding that it is “like four, ” before asking his father about his own number at age 18.

The same article describes Dean being asked about his favorite sexual position and answering in explicit terms, including a pantomime gesture while sitting next to his son, a sequence the piece characterizes as “uncomfortable” viewing.

Their YouTube launch follows weeks of heightened interest in their OnlyFans collaboration, which has included promotional Instagram clips and themed content intended to drive subscribers to their adult pages.

Coverage in The Tab has described videos showing the pair shirtless in Santa hats, joking and posing together, as well as footage shot outdoors that was framed as a playful father–son moment but was in fact promotional material for their adult content.

Another clip reported by The Tab shows the two sitting on a sofa with another OnlyFans creator, removing socks and engaging in foot‑focused content, an example of the fetish‑oriented material used to market their pages.

In a separate feature, The Tab reported that their OnlyFans and Instagram content often involves nudity, foot fetish material, and suggestive photoshoots, and that the pair have acknowledged receiving “very strong explicit requests” about what viewers want to see them do together.

Dean has said in an interview with entertainment outlet TMZ that he and Bray have a close bond and that Bray had already seen him naked before they began working together, which Bray cited as a reason he was not fazed by collaborating in adult content.

In that coverage, Bray is quoted as saying he views his father “as a friend, ” adding that their aim is to “show people our bond, our father and son bond and how it can be special, ” even in the context of adult entertainment.

The father and son have repeatedly insisted their collaboration is “not weird, ” emphasizing consent and their familial closeness, according to multiple write‑ups that summarize their comments.

Online reaction has been sharply divided, particularly on X and Instagram, where many users expressed discomfort or criticized the arrangement as crossing widely accepted boundaries between parents and children.

The Daily Dot reported that some followers accused Dean of tarnishing his reputation by “pretending to have a son in porn, ” prompting him to post a collage of Bray at different ages to show their longstanding family relationship.

Other commenters quoted in that coverage praised Dean as a supportive parent who respected his adult son’s agency, arguing that Bray should be free to choose his career path and that the father’s role is to remain present and caring.

Queer‑focused publications have contextualized the duo within a broader trend of fathers and sons, as well as other family members, appearing together on OnlyFans, often targeting gay and bisexual men’s “daddy” fantasies while blurring the line between marketing, role‑play, and actual kinship.

Commentators in those outlets note that, while some LGBTQ+ viewers may engage with this genre as fantasy, many people — including LGBTQ+ community members — are unsettled by content that combines real family relationships with sexual themes, citing concerns about ethics, power dynamics, and the impact on broader cultural understandings of consent and incest taboos.

Advocates for LGBTQ+ and sex‑worker rights generally stress that adults have the right to engage in consensual sex work and online self‑expression, while also emphasizing the importance of clear boundaries, robust consent, and safeguarding against coercion — principles that many argue are particularly crucial when family relationships intersect with adult content production.

As the “Daddy No” podcast gains views and the OnlyFans collaboration continues, the story of Dean and Bray is functioning as a flashpoint in ongoing cultural debates about how far creators will go to stand out in a crowded adult market, and how audiences — including LGBTQ+ viewers — navigate the tension between fantasy, taboo, and real‑world family ties.


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