News
FBI Raids 7M TikTok Cult in LA: Sex Trafficking & Fraud Allegations

A quiet Tujunga neighborhood was jolted awake on Friday morning as federal and local law enforcement conducted a dramatic raid at a residence tied to Shekinah Church and 7M Films—entities profiled in the 2024 Netflix documentary, Dancing For The Devil: The 7M TikTok Cult. The operation marks a significant escalation in a long-simmering investigation into alleged sex trafficking, financial crimes, and cult-like manipulation within a group that used social media influence as both lure and shield.

The Raid and Its Alleged Targets
Around 6–7 a.m. on July 25, 2025, agents from the FBI, IRS, U.S. Postal Service, U.S. Department of Labor, and the El Monte Tactical Team executed a search warrant at a property in the 7700 block of McGroarty Street. Officers ordered anyone inside to come out with their hands up, then forced entry, deploying flashbangs and ramrods to breach the compound’s iron gate.
Eyewitnesses reported seeing between five and seven individuals detained, including at least one elderly woman and another woman with a child. Investigators were observed loading boxes of potential evidence into vehicles. There were no reported injuries or gunfire during the action.
Focus on “TikTok Cult” and Its Allegations
The targeted property is linked to Robert Shinn, founder of Shekinah Church and 7M Films. Both have been central to shocking claims of emotional, psychological, and financial abuse documented in the Netflix series released in May 2024. The docuseries alleges that Shinn recruited talented young dancers via promises of stardom and social media management, only to exert cult-like control, coercing members to surrender wages and sever family ties. Multiple civil lawsuits allege manipulation, sexual and physical abuse, and financial exploitation under the guise of religious devotion and professional advancement.
Law enforcement confirmed that Friday’s warrants covered a wide net of possible crimes: sex trafficking, money laundering, tax evasion, mail fraud, and COVID-related fraud, among others. Some of these allegations echo previous findings, including judgments against Shinn from labor commissioners who found that followers were made to work full-time for paltry stipends under religious pretenses.
Community Shock and Vindication for Former Members
For Tujunga residents, the operation was a shocking disruption in an otherwise tranquil area. Neighbors described the scene as “creepy” and deeply out of character for the family-oriented neighborhood. For former members like Melanie Lee, who joined Shekinah Church as a teenager and has since become an outspoken critic, the raid represents long-awaited vindication. “We’ve been dreaming about this day … it’s the beginning of where justice will be served for all the victims,” Lee said in an interview. She, along with others profiled in the Netflix docuseries, have campaigned for years to prompt law enforcement investigation, alleging abuse and cult tactics by Shinn.

Ongoing Investigation and Secrecy
Authorities have not yet disclosed the specific evidence obtained or whether any arrests have been officially made—the search warrant remains sealed. However, the high-profile nature of the case, compounded by extensive media and documentary coverage, suggests that more revelations and possibly further legal action could follow soon.
Broader Implications
The saga reveals a disturbing side of social media fame and the entertainment industry, where religious authority and the promise of online stardom allegedly became vehicles for exploitation. The ongoing investigation underscores the depth of community and law enforcement concern, as well as the power of survivor stories in fueling accountability—even after years of institutional inertia.
Note: All details reflect information available as of July 27, 2025.
News
Did OnlyFans Save Creators—or Trap Them?

When news broke that OnlyFans owner Leonid Radvinsky had died at 43, a lot of creators didn’t just think about a billionaire—they thought about the app that had become their rent, their debt plan, and sometimes their last option. For some, OnlyFans genuinely saved them: sex workers and marginalized creators describe using the platform to leave violent in‑person work, control their own boundaries, and finally pick their clients and hours. In the pandemic, when bars, clubs, and service jobs disappeared, the site became a lifeline that helped people pay bills, support kids, and move out of unsafe homes.

But the same platform that offered freedom has also trapped others in a new kind of dependency. Creators talk about burnout from constant posting, parasocial pressure from fans, and feeling forced to escalate the kind of content they make just to keep subscribers from canceling. Young people, especially women and queer creators, describe how “easy money” slowly turned into a situation where their main earning skill is their body online, making it harder to pivot back into mainstream jobs without stigma or digital footprints following them forever.
The power imbalance became painfully clear in 2021, when OnlyFans briefly announced a ban on sexually explicit content after pressure from banks and payment processors. Overnight, many sex workers felt like the platform they built had “turned its back” on them, proving that a single corporate decision could erase their income—even though their content and labor made the site valuable. The ban was reversed after backlash, but the message was clear: creators carried the risk, while owners and financial institutions still held the real control.

Radvinsky’s death doesn’t erase what OnlyFans has meant: it sits in a grey zone between empowerment and exploitation, wealth and vulnerability. For some, it was the first time they set their own prices and refused unsafe work; for others, it was a digital trap that monetized loneliness, fed addiction, and made their bodies into content that never really disappears. As the platform decides what comes after its reclusive owner, the ethical question isn’t just what happens to the company—it’s whether creators will ever have true power over the platforms that define their livelihoods, or if they’ll always be one policy change away from losing everything.
News
How She Earns $40M+ In 2026

Zendaya is on track to make at least $40 million in 2026, with some reports putting her acting income alone near $43 million—a record for a Black actress in a single year. That kind of payday doesn’t come from one project; it comes from a stacked lineup of blockbusters, TV hits, and a sharply curated portfolio of luxury brand deals.
Blockbuster movie salaries
Zendaya’s 2026 film slate includes Spider‑Man: Brand New Day and Dune: Part Three, two of the most profitable franchises in Hollywood. Industry estimates suggest she will earn single‑digit to low‑double‑digit millions per film, with added backend participation if those movies hit big at the box office. Throw in mid‑seven‑figure paychecks for other heavily anticipated movies like The Odyssey and her A‑list 2026 drama, and you already have a $20M+ acting stack before TV even counts.

ZENDAYA
Euphoria: $1 million per episode
On the TV side, Zendaya’s Euphoria deal is one of the most eye‑popping in the industry. After renegotiating her contract, she reportedly earns about $1 million per episode for Season 3 and beyond, making her one of the highest‑paid actresses in cable and streaming. With a full season totaling several episodes, that single show contributes tens of millions over time, and her 2026 seasons alone are pegged around $8 million in income.

Brand deals and fashion ventures
Beyond acting, Zendaya’s income is turbocharged by luxury ambassadorships and her own fashion‑adjacent businesses. She front‑runs campaigns for houses like Bulgari, Valentino, Lancôme, and Louis Vuitton, and those multi‑year deals can add several million dollars annually even when she’s not filming. She also has her own fashion line and shoe brand (Daya by Zendaya), which, while still building, add another revenue stream and long‑term equity value.

Why this matters for creators like you
Zendaya’s $40M+ year is less about one “lucky” paycheck and more about stacking multiple streams: tent‑pole films, premium TV, and high‑margin brand deals. For creators, the lesson is clear: build a portfolio (content, IP, brand collabs) instead of relying on a single platform or project.
Advice
Stop Waiting for Permission — The Film Industry Just Rewrote the Rules

The gatekeepers didn’t just open the door. They left the building.
For decades, filmmakers were told the same story: get the right agent, land the right festival, sign with the right distributor. But in 2026, that story is officially over — and the filmmakers who haven’t gotten the memo are the ones still struggling.
The Old Playbook Is Dead
Streamer acquisitions at Sundance, TIFF, and Cannes have slowed dramatically. The era of premiering your indie film and getting scooped up by Netflix or A24 is no longer a reliable strategy. Buyers are still at festivals — but they’re fewer, more selective, and harder to reach. What that means for you: a festival is now a marketing machine and a career pipeline, not a sales event.
The filmmakers who are winning right now have accepted one uncomfortable truth: the burden of keeping your film alive falls on you. That’s not a threat — it’s the greatest creative freedom this industry has ever offered.

You Already Have Everything You Need
Here’s what Netflix didn’t want you to know: you have more production power in your pocket than Scorsese had in his first decade. A phone. Editing software. AI tools that cost less than your monthly coffee budget. Runway, Higgsfield, ElevenLabs, and Sora are no longer “experimental toys” — they’re production tools being used on actual sets right now.
AI won’t replace your voice. But it will replace the filmmaker who refuses to evolve. Use it for script breakdowns, VFX, dubbing for global distribution, and post-production workflows. The filmmakers leveraging these tools are cutting costs and moving faster than anyone expected.

Your Audience Is Your Distribution Deal
The new model is simple: build your audience before you need them. Document your process. Post weekly. Your personal brand is now your most important asset — more valuable than any distribution agreement you could sign. Platforms like Filmhub, Vimeo On Demand, and Gumroad let you sell directly to fans and keep your rights intact.
Direct-to-audience events — roadshow screenings, pop-up premieres, immersive experiences — are becoming a core release strategy in 2026. You don’t need a theater chain. You need fifty cities and a ticket link.
The One Rule That Changes Everything
Make one complete film every week. Twenty-four hours to think. Twenty-four hours to shoot. The rest of the week to edit and post. Not because every film will be great — but because the filmmaker who ships beats the filmmaker who perfects every single time.
In 2026, a filmmaker with deep trust in a niche audience has a more reliable platform than a studio trying to win the general market. Stop chasing scale. Build something real. The rules didn’t just change — they changed for you.
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