Johnny Sins Interview

By
reviewed
Reviewed by
Last updatedLast updated: February 20, 2024
JoyNights is reader-supported. We may earn a commission through products purchased using links on this page. Learn more about our process here

The following is from a November, 2023 interview with Johnny Sins, one of the world’s most popular adult stars who is often found playing a doctor, lawyer, teacher, plumber, astronaut, and more! Adult-star aside, it’s his magnetically sweet personality that’s won him millions of adoring fans on TikTok as of late.

Johnny Sins on Tiktok

Chris Roney: You have this lovely TikTok with 8.3 million followers, and it’s just so pure and sweet. It’s like, you nursing an injured butterfly to health, or trying to fit in a very tiny cold plunge, or putting a silly filter on — it’s very wholesome. Fans are often in disbelief over how wholesome it is, actually: they comment things like, “Bro’s fr just a normal guy;” “Johnny is unironically the most wholesome guy in the industry;” “Bro why [Johnny Sins] seem like da nicest dude you’d ever meet.”

There’s something here I want to tease out with you. That people are so shocked and amazed to learn that someone can do porn, be their openly horny self, and be a wholesome, sweet person too, says a lot about sex negativity! What do you make of that?

Johnny Sins: I think it’s funny too. I mean, people have watched me mainly in porn scenes, and they think they get to know you through your acting, or a scene. I always get everybody, like, “I thought you would be a dick in real life!” But in real life, I’m just a regular dude, you know? And I don’t know, I don’t try to act like I’m a dick in porn scenes, so I don’t know why it comes off that way. I think it’s really interesting, being able to show a different side of yourself on different social medias. Because TikTok— I don’t want my TikTok to be porn-related at all. I want it to be more a reflection of me and who I really am.

Johnny Sins on Stigma Surrounding Sex Workers

CR: Right, and I was thinking about that! I don’t think you act like a dick in scenes, either, but it speaks to the larger stigma that still exists around sex work and sex itself: that it’s unpure, that it’s a sin, so to speak. And so, to see you be your sweet self, not the person they’ve conjured up, kind of throws a wrench in that one-dimensional, “this is who you are, sex demon, and this is who I am.”

JS: Yeah! Everybody has their perception of sex workers, you know, that we’re all kind of assholes and come from terrible backgrounds. We’re all different in the industry, like any other job. So, the same with the porn business, you know? I grew up in a very normal childhood, both of my parents were married and together forever, so I don’t know how I ended up here.

CR: That’s the thing! There’s nothing wrong with ending up here.

JS: Yeah, don’t think so: a lot of people would disagree. I mean, we [sex workers] have been able to break free sexually, and a lot of people don’t in life. A lot of people hide their fetishes, even from their partners, and then they’re never sexually fulfilled in their lives because they’re afraid to say what turns them on: they fear people will judge them or think it’s weird. Us sex workers, we’re all out in the open about it.

CR: F*gs too, which is where we find kinship. I mean, PornHub is, what, one of the most visited sites ever? The sex-freak call is coming from inside the house, America!

CR: This is the big question, but how would you begin to answer the question of how being an adult film star has shaped your relationship to sex, be it as a performer or in your personal life?

Johnny Sins on OnlyFans, Modeling, and Social Media

JS: Well, I consider shooting for OnlyFans content a sort-of, like, sex hack? Because you get to have sex basically as much as you want, with as many different partners as you want. Especially nowadays, it feels like everyone is doing OF: not only the mainstream porn girls. It’s the Instagram models, all of these different people coming in wanting to shoot sex scenes for OF. It’s really interesting, because 10 years ago, these Instagram models wouldn’t give you the time of day. Now, they’re all in your DMs trying to shoot with you.

CR: It’s interesting, too, because like we talked about with Boomer Banks recently, so many Instagrammers are, like, half an inch away from showing hole anyway: those lines are very blurred.

JS: Instagram has kinda become a soft-core porn app in the last few years, which is funny because they discriminate against sex workers! I think my first IG account was deleted in 2019, I wanna say? For no reason, either. My IG was like my TikTok: very much just focused on me, mainly workout, travel stuff. Hardly ever posted about porn, but it still got taken down, which makes me laugh now when I see Reels all over Instagram: soft-core porn.

CR: Soft-corn porn. It is discriminatory! And it’s pretty ridiculous, considering you have, like, millions of followers.

Johnny Sins on Social Media Censorship

JS: Well, TikTok I always wanted to keep very PG because that account did grow fast. I started that account at just about the same time as everyone else during quarantine, and it sort-of blew up right away, and I always wanted to keep that account. It’s funny. In the industry, people will kinda have TikToks, but they know they’re gonna get deleted eventually if they’re putting their OF through TikTok: they just wanna get as many views as possible before it gets deleted. But I sort of went the opposite route. Like, let me preserve this account, although they still haven’t verified me yet.

CR: I hope it comes one day — maybe at 10 mil. Twitter, do your thing. But it’s crazy: sex workers are taken down all the time just for being sex workers, but folks who aren’t can sell sex all they want and get verified, no problem.

JS: It’s an interesting dynamic… I don’t know if anyone understands besides whoever’s pulling the strings.

CR: It’s big incel behavior, I’ll tell you that much.

Rapid Fire Q&A with Johnny Sins

Favorite Sex Position

CR: Alright, rapid-fire: what’s your favorite sex position, and why?

JS: Definitely missionary because, one, I like to be in control, so I like to be on top. And two, I like to look at my partner in the eyes while I’m fucking them: basically I like to read them and look into their soul, so — for that reason, I just love to look into someone’s eyes.

CR: Hot, one. But two, it’s funny: everyone’s answer is missionary, but a lot of people have hesitation around admitting it! It’s like, ugh, it’s missionary, but missionary’s fun! Getting fucked or doing the fucking.

JS: Especially for mainstream scenes, that was always my pop position — so, the last position before the pop shot — because that was always the position I knew I could cum in. Doggy’s okay, but it doesn’t really do it for me, you know? So I always save missionary for last and I can always pop in that position.

Wildest Place He’s Had Sex

CR: Okay – wildest place you’ve had sex that isn’t that helicopter?

JS: Probably a church? [laughs]

CR: Are we talking, like, in a pew?

JS: Uhhh, so there’s this church — I definitely won’t say the name — but a church here in LA that’s open 24 hours, open to the public, the doors are always open. This was quite a long time ago, but me and my ex-girlfriend, we liked to fuck in public a lot. So we always had this fetish to fuck in a church. One night, I think we’d had a couple drinks, it was around midnight, so we went and checked it out: there was no one around. I think we were up where the preacher would be.

CR[laughs] On the pulpit, yeah.

JS: So that’s probably the craziest place.

For more interview content like this, make sure to subscribe to Joynights on Tiktok and Instagram.

 

About Johnny Sins

Sins’ first pornographic endeavors were through Craigslist ads. Brazzers has described him as a “go-to guy” for the studio, having performed in 1,054 scenes as of April 1, 2019. As of late-2023, he has performed in about 2,300 videos in his career as an actor.

On June 10, 2015, Pornhub launched a crowdfunding campaign through Indiegogo to produce the first adult film in space. Sins and fellow actress Eva Lovia were slated to perform in the film. If the project were successfully funded, the two would have received six months of rigorous preparation for the launch, including zero gravity, velocity, and temperature training. When asked about the opportunity, Sins said, “It’s beyond just doing it for the money, or the money shot for that matter. It’s about making history.” The campaign raised $236,086 over 60 days, failing to reach its goal of $3.4 million.

As of mid-2020, Sins has stopped making porn videos for large scale studios but continues to produce content under his own production company. He has stated that he may return to working for the large studios in the future.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *