Celeb Sex Story

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Celeb Sex Story
Khloe Kardashian, Kris Jenner and More Stars With Sex Stories (Almost) Too Crazy to Be True
It’s no secret that celebrities are chronic over-sharers. From talking about their sex toys to being candid about their, ahem, bathroom habits , stars keep nothing secret, including their crazy sex stories.
Khloé Kardashian , Kris Jenner , Kathy Griffin and other celebs all have NSFW tales you won’t believe they made public.
When asked during an interview with theSkimm in April 2021 what the secret to a great marriage is, Luke Bryan teased, “Communicate and make-up sex.” The country singer has been married to Caroline Boyer since December 2006 and the couple share two sons, Thomas and Tatum. But just where do celebs do the deed? Turns out, they’re pretty open about that too.
During an appearance on The Late Late Show With James Corden in March 2021, Chrissy Teigen dished on the “strangest” place she’s had sex with her husband, John Legend , saying, “We’ve had some fun days.”
The Cravings author then clarified a past sexual encounter she had with the “All of Me” singer. “One time, at the Grammys , I had said that we had sex at ‘that Obama thing,’ and that came out wrong,” she explained. “Because what I actually meant was, it was ‘that Obama thing,’ but it wasn’t with them or near them. It was the DNC [the Democratic National Convention], actually.” The model then proceeded to “fire off” a group of places they’ve hooked up, saying, “Fred Segal. Yeah, right in front of the juice bar. On a plane — not even private, James. Public!”
As for Teen Mom 2 star Kailyn Lowry , she admitted that her children have “definitely” walked in on her getting down in the bedroom. “I won’t tell the story because I don’t want to put my kids on blast. I think I’m more scarred [than them] though,” she said on her “Baby Mamas No Drama” podcast in November 2020. “Like, I’m more scarred for life than they are because I’m like, f–k, if they didn’t have questions before, I don’t know if they do. So, do I need to address them?”
Keep scrolling to see stars’ craziest sex stories!
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MEGA; Courtesy of Chris Lopez/Instagram
Chris Lopez admitted he and on-again, off-again girlfriend, Kailyn Lowry , had sex in a doctor’s office .
The father of two, who shares sons Lux and Romello Creed with the Teen Mom personality, spoke out about it during a NSFW episode of his “ P.T.S.D. Pressure Talks with Single Dads ” podcast.
“I ain’t going to lie. I even forgot about this s–t,” he said in August 2021. “We were going, for like, an ultrasound [appointment]. The doctor slid out, and I was just sitting there looking at her.”
Scott Kirkland/Fox/Picturegroup/Shutterstock
"I wish it was more exciting," she said back in 2013. "I certainly did it, so I can say I did it in the Grand Canyon, because otherwise it’s the back seat of a car and that’s not exciting. But the bottom of the Grand Canyon is not fun. There’s like scorpions and stones and dirt and it’s hot. It was like the strangest and worst sex of my life."
“I sensed that a lot of evil s–t had gone down in that house,” he wrote in his memoir, Every Little Step: My Story . “To this day I believe that house was haunted.”
“One memorable night, one of the ghosts descended from the ceiling and had sex with me. After you stop laughing, I need you to hear what I’m saying because I’m not making this up. And let me add this: This was before I ever touched any drug besides weed and alcohol.”
“We had sex in the bathroom and we came out and nobody said anything,” she said back in 2015.
“At the end of the flight, the flight attendant got on the microphone. ‘Congratulations, Mr. and Mrs. Jenner! You’ve just joined the Mile High Club. We’re so proud of you, and we decided to give you a bottle of champagne! Yay!’ I could not squish down in my seat low enough. I was mortified!”
"I didn't have a good time in the end," he said in 2014. "My wife found the whole thing to be quite hysterical even while it was happening. She was actually on the bed, watching, eating a bag of chips, laughing, so as you can imagine, I wasn't really performing to the best of my abilities. Also, said prostitute wasn't engaging with my wife the way I hoped she would and so it all kind of fell apart, and the rest is in the book."
“He walked in on me giving my husband a favor at two o’clock in the morning,” she said in 2016. “And then he looked, and what did you think we did? Continued! … The next day, he was going out with some of his friends and I usually, we leave the house with a hug and a kiss. We hugged, but he wouldn’t kiss me!”
The Red Hot Chili Peppers frontman came clean about his first time in his biography, Scar Tissue .
"One night, when Anthony was 12, he went with his father to the Rainbow Room and [his father's] girlfriend is there dancing for him," ghostwriter Larry Sloman writes. "And Anthony asks, 'Dad, can I have my first sexual experience with your girlfriend?' And [his father] says, 'Sure, son.'
"So they go back to the house, and his dad builds a big bed out of four mattresses in his room and puts the girl in next to him. And that's how he [loses his virginity]."
People Picture/Willi Schneider/Shutterstock
"I open my eyes and there was a lady at the bottom of the bed," he said in 2016. "She went, 'Have you got morning glory?' This is back in the day when I used to have morning glory! So I was like, 'Yeah!' She says, 'I'll w–k you off!' I'm really young and I can close my eyes and pretend it's somebody else, so it's like, 'Yeah, go on then!'"
"Someone else was driving and I was in the backseat, but I'm a tall girl so it feels cramped and it hurts my f–king knees," she wrote on her blog back in 2016. "Getting down in a moving car is a waste of time, because nothing happens for me. I just don't get to the finish line!" she wrote. "If you're down for a thrill, then by all means, but this one gets a low rating from me!"
"I remember being at Carl’s Jr. in Hollywood one night, meeting some motorcycle gang member, and just climbing on his bike and leaving with him," she said in 2009. "I’m surprised I was never killed. I never drank, but I’d go to nightclubs, then just go home with a guy. Here was my problem: My type was pretty much any guy who said 'hi' to me."
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It’s not a new story: women trading youth and beauty for social status, and men using wealth and fame for access to youth and beauty.
“In sharing our experiences, we really felt validated. … It was so relieving for all of us, like, we’re not crazy. We’re not being too emotional.”
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“I want it to be understood that I’m not scorned. I’m not sad because I didn’t get him as a boyfriend.”
Jenny (not her real name), 35, said that a man approached her and said hi while she was walking on the beach with her 9-year-old daughter last September. “He had a mask on, so I didn’t really pay much attention,” she told me. He walked away and then circled back and pulled down his mask. She recognized the actor immediately. David (a pseudonym) was down-to-earth, handsome, and charming. “He started asking me more personal questions about myself and ended up giving me his phone number. I was kind of in disbelief, and I didn’t really know what he wanted,” she said.
She said they began DM’ing after she tweeted at him later that day. “He was really nice at first, and he did seem interested in me as a person,” she said. She said she told him about her past experience with abuse and how she had experienced PTSD. “I felt that by doing that, I was letting him know that I wasn’t in a position to be objectified,” she said.
About two days later, she recalled, the messages changed in tone. “It was abrupt. It [went] from talking about normal life … and then [he] started requesting very sexual, and — now that I look back at it — very embarrassing things,” she said. She told me he asked for nude photos and explicit videos, which she sent and basked in his attention via Snapchat, phone calls, FaceTime, and texts.
They discussed meeting again in real life, but he said he wasn’t interested in a relationship. He said “he [had] just gotten out of one, that he couldn’t be there emotionally,” she told me. “I was OK with that.” But Jenny felt that he was sending mixed messages. “He was insisting he didn’t want a relationship while asking for things you would ask for in a relationship, like exclusivity,” she said. She told him she wasn’t dating anyone else, but he didn’t offer the same on his end. He also asked her not to tell any of her friends about what they were doing. “He [said] he was a really private person and he values his privacy, which I understand because he’s a public figure. But it was also a level of secrecy that made me feel uncomfortable,” she said.
Then, she recalled, he asked for something new. “He wanted to do this whole dom-sub thing,” which she said he had never stated outright but implied through his actions. He told her to refer to him as “sir” and to answer his questions with a “yes, sir.” When she had an orgasm over video chat, she had to say his name and then say “thank you” when she was done.
Later, she said, he started pestering her for increasingly explicit photos and videos. If she had raised any concerns, she said, rather than address how he was making her feel, he would say things like, “You [said] you were OK with it.” “It really, really messed with my head the whole time because he kept insisting he didn’t want a relationship, but he kept contacting me for months.” She said she stayed in touch with him for nearly a year, assuming that the actor was seeing other women — he was a movie star, after all — but also feeling pressured into doing things she didn’t want to do.
Stories like Jenny’s are emblematic of the messy post-#MeToo debates swirling around sex, power, and agency — especially in celebrity–civilian encounters. More and more stories are popping up on social media about these interactions and the complicated feelings women have about them — particularly around expectations of honesty. And perhaps most crucially, women now feel more comfortable uniting with each other to call out the power imbalances. But not everyone agrees on the most effective way to do it or how best to untangle the thorny questions that arise.
This summer, Jenny began following Deuxmoi, a crowdsourced celebrity gossip Instagram account . Deuxmoi, which declined to comment for this story, publishes unverified and uncorroborated reader-submitted comments about celebrities, including anything from sightings to purported leaks of information. The account's bio reads, “statements made on this account have not been independently confirmed. this account does not claim any information published is based in fact.”
Rebecca Ortiz, an assistant professor at Syracuse University who studies the #MeToo movement and social media, said that accounts like Deuxmoi are useful for women precisely because they can’t be verified. “Somebody with power [is] going to be able to use that power against anybody who is accusing them. … To gain any power back, you have to sometimes go into these anonymous ‘unverified spaces’ because you’re not being heard anywhere else,” Ortiz said. But sharing stories anonymously can lead to backlash. “Voicing those stories in a space that isn’t verified plays into that tendency we have already to question victims and survivors. But it’s not the space itself doing that, it’s our culture. ”
It’s possible that untrue accusations of sexual assault could be shared on sites like Deuxmoi; the account has posted tips that later turned out to be false. But a fear of being accused of lying has led many women to keep quiet about assault, Ortiz said. That’s why some are more comfortable sharing their stories anonymously, particularly after the #MeToo movement led them to recognize they weren’t alone, she added.
Jenny saw a series of posts about a famous fortysomething actor from an early aughts TV show cavorting around New York City with different women. (We’ll call him John.) The posts featured reader-submitted sightings: John at a downtown hot spot with his arm around a woman, or at a famed restaurant with another woman.
These posts contained unverified information from unidentified sources but still inspired passionate conversations. Some readers reveled in the drama of John’s paramours finding out about each other, while others claimed to be the women from the posts, tweeting about being surprised or jokingly suggesting they all meet up because there were so many of them.
With claims like these proliferating on the internet, many of them impossible to authenticate, discussing celebrity activities with such fervor might seem trivial or unjustified. But Hilde Van den Bulck, a professor of communication studies at Drexel University, doesn’t think so. “When we talk about celebrities, we’re talking about ourselves,” she said. She has analyzed reader reactions to celebrity sex scandals and found that even though most people begin discussions with comments about the celebrity, they move on to more general issues.
Dissecting a famous person’s sex life allows people to “talk about things that are difficult to talk about,” she said. “Even in 2021, talking about sex is still not that [easy]. It may be more easy to talk about [sex] through celebrities.” These conversations allow people to ask, Where do we stand as a society? Should we rethink our norms?
One of the women who said she met John over the summer was 24-year-old Casey. She attended an exclusive early aughts–themed party on New York City’s Lower East Side with her 23-year-old friend. John stood out among the sea of beautiful twentysomethings. He approached the pair and asked for Casey’s friend’s number.
A few weeks later, Casey said, she ran into the actor at a bar in Brooklyn and he hit on her. “I don’t even think he remembered meeting me when I was with my friend. I think he’s just probably hooked up with a lot of young girls that it probably doesn’t even register,” she said. She turned him down.
I asked Casey about the group of Deuxmoi readers who had called John out. While she thought it was weird for someone in his 40s to hang out with people in their 20s, she said women shouldn’t be complaining. “You can’t be like, ‘I’m being taken advantage of,’ because you’re not a child. You’re an adult. You clearly want to date someone with more money.” And she said the power differential works both ways. For example, some women might have wanted to have sex with him because they were Instagram influencers. “Once they find out he’s wealthy and has been on TV, that’s a motivating factor [for them],” she said. “On one [hand], these women are clearly using him for clout. And on the other hand, he’s clearly using them because they’re hot and young, so it’s on both ends a little messed up.”
It’s not a new story: women trading youth and beauty for social status, and men using wealth and fame for access to youth and beauty. “Youth and attractiveness is a different type of power,” said Justin Lehmiller, a research fellow who studies the psychology of sex at the Kinsey Institute. “There’s this tendency for the job and the money to be the sole focus of these power conversations, and I don’t think that’s the full picture.”
Meanwhile, Deuxmoi began publishing posts from women who were sleeping with other celebrities, and even more stories about the stars flooded in.
Jenny was inspired by what she read on Deuxmoi and wondered if other women had had exploitative experiences with David.
She tapped out a DM to the account asking if she could connect with other women who’d had encounters with David, which it reposted. Like Deuxmoi’s other Instagram stories, it stayed up for 24 hours before disappearing. She waited by her phone, curious whether anyone would reach out.
Celebrities are sexy precisely because they have power and fame; some of their fans crave proximity to that. “The idea of sleeping with a celebrity is a really popular sexual fantasy and one that most people will never have the opportunity to act out,” said Lehmiller. In a comprehensive survey of sexual fantasies published in his book Tell Me What You Want , Lehmiller found that 63% of heterosexual women claimed to have had that desire.
Some who do get to interact with celebrities no longer just tell their closest friends about it; they share their stories on social media. In May, a 19-year-old celebrity assistant shared on TikTok a screencap purportedly from her FaceTime call with then–51-year-old actor Matthew Perry after they matched on the dating app Raya, which she thought was “innocent” at the time. She later told Page Six : “It’s not really OK for these older guys to be talking to such young girls.” (Perry did not respond to a BuzzFeed News request for comment.)
One impact of the #MeToo movement has been women alleging on social media negative and even abusive experiences they’ve had with celebrities. In some cases, the celebrities have faced consequences. Recent sexual abuse accusations lodged on Twitter against comedian Chris D’Elia led to a lawsuit, his manager dropping him, and him being recast in a movie. (D’Elia denied the allegations .) A former employee of Andrew Cuomo , then the New York governor, made accusations of sexual harassment on Twitter. The governor was investigated by New York’s attorney general and has since resigned. (Cuomo denied the allegations .) Armie Hammer was accused of rape in March by a woman running the Instagram account @houseofeffie. Other women then contacted her, saying Hammer had abused or manipulated them, and she posted screenshots of alleged texts between Hammer and some of these women. ( Hammer denied the allegations .)
But while most public #MeToo allegations are related to potential crimes, many of the claims surfaced by Deuxmoi neither rise to the level of criminality nor become anything more than an uninvestigated Instagram blip. As one woman who said she was involved with David told me, “This is not a #metoo case, but it is a callout and condemnation for disrespect toward women.”
Some readers thought that Deuxmoi’s posts were intrusive. “Why should the general public need to know if any actor sleeps around if they’re doing so legally and consensually? Millions of non famous men do that every day, are we gonna ‘expose’ them too?” one person wrote on a Deuxmoi subreddit (not officially associated with Deuxmoi). Another user chimed in: “Is it a cultural revolution to do the male version of slut-shaming?”
Recently, a New York Post article, inspired by Deuxmoi’s posts purportedly about the dating life of Succession actor Nicholas Braun, was called out on Twitter and Reddit for relying on unverified accounts and for dissecting the actor’s alleged liaisons. "Lol, what’s the story? Pleasant, personable male celebrity has no shortage of women interested in him? If he’s abusive or violent, expose him by all means, but that doesn’t seem to be the case by all accounts, so who cares?” one person wrote on the r/SuccessionTV subreddit. (Braun did not respond to a request for comment from BuzzFeed News.)
Lehmiller said that criticizing someone who’s dating several people isn’t necessarily slut-shaming unless the focus is the “sheer number of sexual partners.” If a person isn’t transparent about having many part
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