Stand Still and See, the sixth episode of Euphoria season three, was released over the weekend. Like several other episodes from this season, it quickly stirred debate among viewers.
One scene in particular drew a strong reaction online. It shows Cassie, played by Sweeney, wrestling with a large python for her OnlyFans subscribers while wearing only a beige thong.
Another person kept their reaction short and asked: “What is this show even about???”
The comments summed up a wider feeling among some viewers, who seemed less shocked by the explicit nature of the scene and more confused about what the show was trying to say with it.
“There’s frustration because these portrayals often reinforce the idea that creators have no boundaries and will do absolutely anything for money,” said Dupéré.
“That’s simply not reflective of how most creators operate in real life. “
The adult platform expert continued: “Scenes such as dressing the character as a dog or a baby were clearly designed to provoke reactions, but they also reinforced some of the most damaging stereotypes people already project onto sex workers.”
Dupéré’s point was that scenes built only around shock can leave viewers with a narrow view of the industry. Instead of showing the planning, consent, limits, and business side of content creation, the scene leaned into the most extreme version of what audiences might already imagine.
“A lot of people outside the industry assume these platforms are completely lawless spaces, and that’s not accurate,” the expert added.
“Creators work within platform rules, payment processor restrictions, moderation systems, branding strategies, and personal boundaries. Most treat this as a serious business.”
“Creators today are entrepreneurs, marketers, editors, community managers, and independent business owners. That reality rarely gets represented onscreen.”
Her comments suggest the issue is not only about one shocking scene. For her, the bigger problem is that creator culture is often used onscreen for drama while the real skill, labor, and business sense behind that work are left out.