Mia Khalifa, a former Pornhub star, revealed to her devoted Twitter followers what she finds slutty on a man, and it's a piece of jewelry that she can't get enough of.
Mia Khalifa Shares 'The Sluttiest Thing A Man Can Do' In Raunchy Tweet
The "sluttiest thing a man can do," according to ex-porn queen Mia Khalifa, was revealed in a racy late-night tweet.
Nearly 3,000 people liked the ironic comment, and many more left several comments to get the ex-Pornhub star's attention.
"The sluttiest thing a man can do is wear a thin gold chain," wrote the porn phenomenon and OnlyFans star.
It was her take on a trending Twitter style where users add something nice and then write, "the sluttiest thing a person can do is."
On the second anniversary of the Beirut port explosion, which claimed at least 218 lives, the Lebanese-American displayed her astounding kindness by making a significant payment to the Lebanese Red Cross.
On August 4, she posted a screenshot revealing that she had donated $10k to the organization.
The celebrity posted about her donation on social media and tweeted screenshots with the following caption: “Cheers to happier times, past and future #Lebanon, I love you.”
Mia was born in Lebanon but now calls the US home. Before transitioning to sports TV presenting, she worked as a webcam model and a porn actress.
Mia was the most watched performer on Pornhub for the first two months of her career, and she quickly gathered up a sizable fan base.
The starlet, who is not afraid of controversy, has received a lot of backlash in the Middle East.
This became very clear when she was photographed engaging in sexual activity while wearing a hijab.
In response to the criticism, Mia has promoted important subjects like the brutality against Palestinians and Lebanon's history and culture through her celebrity platform.
"At its core, the Lebanese just want to love, eat, dance, and die peacefully on our beautiful land and be buried into the soil that grows these magical grapes," she wrote on her Instagram page on Thursday.
She continued: “Before the civil war, before the Beirut blast, before the economic destruction, before air raids, before the heartache and mass emigration.”