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Sophia Locke Talks Second Acts and Self-Love

Sophia Locke Talks Second Acts and Self-Love

Sophia Locke has the kind of presence that instantly makes you want to lean in. She’s confident, effortlessly glamorous and exudes sincerity. Chatting with her feels like catching up over lattes with your best friend — who happens to casually drop that she’s filming three Adult Time features next month.

After becoming well-known as a cam model and an early force for community in the camming world, Locke took a five-year break from the industry. Since her return, her career as a full-fledged adult star has been thriving.

The taboo stuff I do — like fauxcest, futanari or horror porn — is super out there, and that’s part of the fun. It’s like, ‘What’s the wildest thing I can think of to say out loud in the middle of sex, while looking like I’m not even thinking about it?’

She first entered the industry in 2010. Intrigued by a pop-up ad for LiveJasmin and curious about whether the stunning woman on screen really was “live,” she clicked, watched — and soon found herself logging on with a mask, earning $150 her first night.

“I couldn’t wait to quit my day job,” she remembers. “It was full of such interesting fetishes and people. I was hooked.”

Seven years of camming followed, during which she built a loyal fan base and developed her voice, one that blended sensuality, honesty and emotional intelligence. During the final year and a half of her first run, she started shooting for Kink.com.

“That was the dream,” Locke says. “I was into heavy BDSM in my personal life, so it felt authentic and exciting.”

The momentum paused, however, when she fell in love. While her new partner never explicitly asked her to quit porn, he still made her feel like her career was a “problem.”

“I changed myself to try and keep him,” she reflects. “Which was a mistake, of course.”

Locke left the industry altogether, moved to the Seattle area and worked in real estate for five years. When the relationship ended — “He fell in love with someone we were dating” — she took a breath and asked herself what she missed most.

“I missed the community… and the exhibitionism!” she laughs. “I missed sharing my body with everyone — within my boundaries, of course.”

‘Why am I turned on by this?’

With the encouragement of a best friend who was still working in the business, Locke quietly opened an OnlyFans account.

“I wasn’t expecting anything big,” she insists. “I just wanted to dip my toe back in. Even if I didn’t make a lot of money, it would at least be fun to come back.”

As it turned out, her fans and friends had not forgotten her.

“I received the warmest welcome I could have asked for,” she marvels. “From the cam community, from my fans who still remembered me after five years and from new people who were excited to see my new look. It was just off to the races from there.”

These days, her daily updates on OnlyFans invite her followers into her life in a way that echoes her early days of camming.

“It’s a behind-the-scenes look — sometimes with no makeup, just me talking about what it’s really like on set,” she says. “It keeps that connection alive.”

As for studio work, she’s gone all in. After starting her comeback by self-booking, she explored a number of potential agencies before recently signing with ATMLA.

“The professionalism at ATMLA is just next-level,” she attests. “I feel protected. I feel seen.”

For a recent shoot booked through the agency, the producer called her directly to walk her through how extreme the content would be, to make sure she was 100% comfortable with it.

“That level of care matters,” she says. “Especially when you’re doing BDSM or more taboo stuff. If you know my history, you know I’ve done multiple water-sports shoots in Berlin, giant bukkakes in Madrid and over 40 shoots for Kink.com, being waterboarded and electro-tortured. So it’s absolutely something I’m comfortable with — but I love that my agency is doing its due diligence and protecting its talent.”

Taboo content isn’t just part of Locke’s brand — it’s part of her creative engine.

“I’ve always been drawn to the weird stuff,” she explains. “I think it’s really fun to push myself — and to play things seriously, not just campy. I like when it makes viewers and fans question themselves. Like, ‘Why am I turned on by this?’

“But it’s all being presented by consenting adults in a safe, intentional environment,” she stresses. “Companies like Adult Time push the boundaries of what’s taboo, but they do it with so much respect and professionalism.”

When Porn Gets Personal

Locke differentiates between adult work that is just fun, and adult work that draws upon her own particular passions.

“The taboo stuff I do — like fauxcest, futanari or horror porn — is super out there, and that’s part of the fun,” she says, smiling. “It’s like, ‘What’s the most fucked up thing I can think of to say out loud in the middle of sex, while looking like I’m not even thinking about it?’ Every day is something new — different scripts, different companies, different role-plays. That’s what keeps the job exciting.

“It helps with burnout, too,” she adds. “Because I don’t do anything I’m not authentically comfortable with.”

Locke’s BDSM shoots, though, connect with something deeper inside her.

“Those are thrill-seeking for me,” she admits. “That adrenaline, that fear — but always with the safety net in the back of my mind. I’m being pushed, physically and mentally, but I’m safe. That contrast, that tension, is where I get the personal sexual thrill.”

While she doesn’t have a pre-scene ritual per se, Locke does favor a particular style of post-scene aftercare.

“I like to talk through it with my co-star,” she says. “What worked, what felt good. It helps me come down from the intensity.”

On Building Community and Knowing Your Limits

Locke has long championed the importance of community in the adult industry. Back in her camming days, she was the face of Cam Girl Mansion, — an event series and social hub for performers — and a key voice in the documentary “Camgirlz.”

“Honestly, I didn’t think about branding or strategy at the time,” she says. “I just loved the people I worked with. I felt this kinship with other cam girls. And I had a partner who was great at organizing, so it all came together.”

She fondly recalls learning about a fan who met his wife at one of Locke’s events.

“I was just horny and having fun,” she laughs. “But a by-product of that was something beautiful. These events meant something. They brought people together.”

Being part of “Camgirlz” also helped her glimpse the bigger picture.

“I didn’t realize the impact it would have, but it helped humanize us,” That’s become a theme in my work, whether on TikTok or in interviews: just showing that sex workers are people. We’re professionals. We have boundaries. We just happen to be comfortable being sexual on camera.”

When asked what advice she’d give to cam models transitioning to studio work, Locke doesn’t hesitate.

“Find your community,” she says. “There are girls-only DM groups in major cities where people share safety info and job leads. And get clear on your comfort level.”

The shift from camming to studios, she points out, comes with a whole different level of exposure.

“You can geoblock on cam, control your visibility more,” she notes. “But once you’re doing studio work, you’re on the front page of sites you can’t take yourself off of. These companies have spent sometimes decades building up their distribution networks. With all the affiliate sites, you’re going to be plastered everywhere. That’s a big decision.”

It’s clear from her firm but empathetic tone that Locke intends this not as a warning, but as practical advice for preparing.

“I love it,” she affirms. “I love being seen. But not everyone does. So check in with yourself first.”

Life is Sweet

Despite her high-octane onscreen presence, Locke leads a relatively quiet life.

“I travel a lot between LA and Vegas, so when I’m home, I recharge,” she says. “I go to the gym. I get a massage. I spend time with my small circle of friends.”

Her main private vice: a little bowl of candy in bed.

“I have a whole shelf in both apartments,” she laughs. “Junior Mints, Milk Duds, gummy bears. It’s my treat. That’s as wild as I get outside of work.”

Locke has several high-profile releases dropping this summer, including “Camp Conversion,” “Let Me In 2” and “Milo Oasis” for Transfixed. Her goals include more features, more high-impact work — and maybe, someday, a Fleshlight.

“My pussy is adorable,” she says with a grin.

More than anything, Sophia Locke wants to keep showing up.

“I just want to have incredible sex,” she declares. “And have everyone on the internet watch it and masturbate to it!”

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