Sep 12
Ukranian-born JustFor.Fans Creator Wrongskiy Finds Confidence in Plus-Size Content
Kilian Melloy READ TIME: 7 MIN.
"When I was growing up," JustFor.Fans creator Wrongskiy – who also posts at X under the moniker Eurochub 70k – tells EDGE, "I always noticed that Hollywood movies showed us that handsome men must be thin and fit. And the porn industry taught us that sexy men should be masculine and hung.
"I never felt related to any of those stereotypes," the Ukranian-born creator adds. "I realized that there are a lot of people who find beauty in all sorts of bodies. I want to believe that my content can inspire other people to feel confident, desirable, and sexy, even if they are not the Hollywood or porn standard."
Practicing what he preaches, Wrongskiy models inclusivity for plus-sized men at his sites. On JustFor.Fans, the content creator declares himself to be a "Ukrainian chubby boy" who is "Horny [and] versatile," and advises that his videos feature "duos, threesoms, orgys, [and] outdoor sex". He tells EDGE that he creates "Very variable sorts of content. I am always trying to find new ideas, new collaborations, new situations.
"I love group sex. A lot." Wrongskiy adds. "I am still discovering my sexuality, and I am always open to new adventures.
"I feel like doing what I do," the self-described "chubby boy" adds. "I can be as creative as I want to be."
Declaring at his X account that "All types of bodies are sexy," Wrongskiy happily reveals his every curve, teasing the hot hookups and sweaty collabs available to subscribers at his JustFor.Fans page. But apart from his online adventures, the sensuous young man – who made his way from war-torn Ukraine to the safety of Canada only six months ago – pursues a very different passion in real life: He's a professional choir singer.
"I feel in love with choral music since I was a teenager," Wrongskiy explains, "and since then I have always been involved in all types of choirs. I got a Choral Conducting [degree] back in Kyiv, so every place I move to, I am always trying to find the local choir community to become a part of.
"Creating music with your voice and assembling it with other people voices gives me pleasure, enjoyment and happiness," he adds. "It is also a very therapeutic way to let it all out."
Wrongskiy answered EDGE's emailed questions to share more about his story and his sexy online adventures.
EDGE: You're from Ukraine. Growing up there, did you face anti-LGTBQ+ prejudice?
Wrongskiy: Yes, I have. Since childhood after the Soviet Union was over, the Ukrainian government removed any anti-LGBTQ+ laws that used to consider it a mental illness; but people's mind and culture do not change overnight. A lot of people still used to think that it was a problem, that nobody should be gay, and it made it very hard to come out. In fact, I was so afraid to come out that I had to move from my small hometown to Kyiv to live my life without hiding.
EDGE: Was it easy as a young queer person in Ukraine to find others to explore and hook up with?
Wrongskiy: Not at all. Everyone was afraid to share pictures in dating apps. Every time I would arrange with someone to hook up, I was super scared that they would be pretending to be gay just to get to me and insult, hurt, or even kill me.
EDGE: Are you out as LGBTQ+ to friends and family in Ukraine? Do they know you create content at JustFor.Fans?
Wrongskiy: I am out only to my Friends but not my family. Every friend that I kept from childhood and college knows I am gay, but not many know that I make JustFor.Fans content.
Kilian Melloy serves as EDGE Media Network's Associate Arts Editor and Staff Contributor. His professional memberships include the National Lesbian & Gay Journalists Association, the Boston Online Film Critics Association, The Gay and Lesbian Entertainment Critics Association, and the Boston Theater Critics Association's Elliot Norton Awards Committee.