The warnings have also extended to engaging with OnlyFans stars: Vaping, disease and drug warning as Schoolies begins
Published by RawNews1st
In 2025, the warnings have also extended to engaging with OnlyFans stars.
British adult content creator Lily Phillips, who rose to fame after taking on a challenge to sleep with 100 men in one day, arrived into Sydney this week.
The 24-year-old was photographed at the airport on Thursday reportedly bound for the Gold Coast and has said she will be linking up with Aussie OnlyFans star Annie Knight.
“We’re just going to have some fun, and we’re going to find some Australian boys,” Phillips told a reporter at Sydney Airport when she arrived into the country.
Tens of thousands of young Aussies have descended onto destinations like the Gold Coast, Byron Bay and Airlie Beach to celebrate after 13 years of primary and secondary education.
The annual event, seen as a rite of passage, allows those who finished high school this year to let their hair down and party with their friends following weeks of studying and exams.
But every year, authorities and experts are forced to issue notices about behaviour and illegal or dangerous acts that have made headlines in the past.
She has kept her plans quiet, likely due to fellow British sex worker Bonnie Blue, who was kicked out of Australia by the Albanese government last year after calling out for “barely-legal 18-year-old men” to film content with her during Schoolies week.

Speaking to news.com.au, Avinash Singh, a Sydney criminal lawyer at Astor Legal, said what can be seen as “harmless fun” could lead to a lifetime of regret.
“It’s easy when you’re young to think that this is a bit of fun that you’re engaging in but you just have to think long-term in terms of what the consequences are going to be,” he said.
Adult stars have previously insisted participants who film content with them must prove they’re aged over 18, not be under the influence of drugs and alcohol, and sign a waiver.
Knight previously said anyone who changes their mind during and after filming can withdraw consent and the video would not be shared.
But Mr Singh warned that once published online, and someone changes their mind, it could be late as “some sort of record” remains on the web.
“Generally, once something gets on the internet it’s very difficult to get rid of it completely,” he told news.com.au.
“It will be accessible to your friends, family, potential future employers and it can really handicap you going forward in life.
“So it’s something that you should really have a think about carefully before agreeing to engage in this type of content.”