You're the creator. You film the videos and photos. A separate chatting team then sells that content for you, inside DMs, as if they were you. These script documents are the bridge between the two of you: you read them to know what to shoot, and the team reads them to know what to sell and in what order.
So when you see a script, don't think of it as one video. Think of it as a full session's worth of content for a single theme — built so the team can take a fan all the way from a friendly hello to a big spend, without ever running out of things to sell.
Here is the whole loop, start to finish:
For each theme (shower, cooking, bedroom…) you shoot a spread of videos and photos following that script's shot list — from soft and teasing at the start to fully explicit at the peak.
You drop everything you film into your Google Drive (your personal upload hub). From there the chatting team uploads it into the vault, organised by level (L0 → L7). The team never films anything — they only sell what you've already made.
Chatting as you, the team warms a fan up, then sells the content one level at a time. Each level is a little more explicit, and a little more expensive, than the last.
As the fan gets more turned on, he buys the next level… then the next. The more good content sits on each rung, the further he climbs and the more he spends.
This is exactly why every script has multiple LEVELS, with a VARIETY of content at each stage. The team needs a ladder of content to sell as the conversation heats up and the fan spends more. A script that's just "one video" gives them one thing to sell and then the session is over. A script built as a ladder gives them seven escalating things to sell — that's the whole point.
When a script asks for several shorter clips and a handful of photos at a level instead of one long video, there's a real reason. Two, in fact:
Every extra piece on a rung is something the team can sell separately or bundle for more. More content per level means more the chatter can charge for before the fan moves up — and a fuller ladder means he climbs higher overall.
Several shorter clips bundled together feel generous and never reveal how long the actual footage is — so the fan never feels short-changed. A pile of 5–7 photos alongside them makes the bundle look rich and pushes the unlock rate up.
So when a script says "at least 2 short videos + 5–7 photos" at a level, film exactly that — a variety of angles, moments and short clips. It's not busywork. It's what gives the chatting team enough to sell, and what makes each bundle feel worth unlocking.
This is context, not a task. You don't run the chats — the team does. But understanding how they sell helps you film the best possible content for each theme, because you'll know what each level is actually being used for. This is explained here once, and it applies to every script.
The whole model is the girlfriend experience. The team chats as if they are you — same name, same backstory, same favourites — using the facts from your onboarding questionnaire. To the fan, he's talking to one girl: you. Most fans are here because they can't find this connection in real life, so the team's job is to become the girlfriend he's missing — get to know him, make him feel special, and make him a little obsessed.
A fan spends money for two reasons only: when he's horny, and when he's in love. The team plays both. That's why your content is sold slowly and wrapped in genuine warmth — not blasted out as a price list.
Within the first conversation, the team sizes up each fan and sorts him onto a list. This decides how hard to push and how high to price. Your content is the same — but what it sells for flexes to the man.
| Tier | Who he is | How he's handled |
|---|---|---|
| 🕓 Time Wasters | All talk, never pays — just wants free attention. | Label him. Cheap mass-messages only — never dedicated 1-on-1 attention. |
| 🐭 Mice | Spends tiny amounts. Happy with bits & pieces for cheap. | Sell cheap "leftover" content at the floor. Don't invest much energy. |
| 💵 Spenders | Buys at guide price, steadily. | Run the ladder as written. Reliable income. |
| 💰 Ballers | Comfortable, buys up the ladder readily. | Push the full ladder + customs. |
| 🐋 Whales | High earners, big tippers, low price-sensitivity. | Price well above guide. Customs are the goal. |
A video has no fixed price — what makes it worth money is the perceived value and how high-class you're presented. The same clip might sell for $30 to a student and $300 to a banker.
Every script runs on the same ladder. Content gets a little more explicit, and a little more expensive, on each rung. The team sells in stages — teasing first, slowly revealing more, building arousal until the fan is the one asking for more. They "deserve the sale" at each step rather than expecting it.
Many fans finish before L6 — that's fine, the team never makes him feel bad and just sets up next time with a warm "can't wait to do that again with you 😈". No single PPV ever goes over $200 — once a fan is buying at that ceiling, the team sells more at $200 (2–5× bundles) rather than pricing higher.
The ceiling above the ladder is the custom: once a fan is hooked, he directs his own private video (his name, outfit, act). Customs are the holy grail — most emotionally bought-in, least price resistance. Customs are $100/minute · 3-min minimum ($300) · or $800 for a 15+ minute one as a treat (always 50% tip upfront). When the scripts stop landing for a big spender, the team pivots to customs to keep extracting at a higher level — always categorising each fan and pulling the most from him while keeping him a happy, long-term spender.
Every price in a script is a guide price, not a fixed tag. The team reads the fan's tier and prices up for Whales, at guide for Spenders, and at the floor for Rats. They can negotiate down once, gracefully, if a fan objects — but only down a notch, and never on demand. We never publish a menu with prices.
To make your pre-filmed content feel made-for-him in the moment, the team drops a line like this right before sending a clip — it sells authenticity, that you're filming it live, just for him, right now:
This is why your clips should feel spontaneous and personal, never overly produced — they get reused as if they're being filmed live in the conversation.
That's everything. From here, open any individual script and just focus on what to film — the levels, the variety, and the shot list. The selling side is already handled by this page.