THE AMERICA ONE NEWS
Jun 2, 2025  |  
0
 | Remer,MN
Sponsor:  QWIKET 
Sponsor:  QWIKET 
Sponsor:  QWIKET: Elevate your fantasy game! Interactive Sports Knowledge.
Sponsor:  QWIKET: Elevate your fantasy game! Interactive Sports Knowledge and Reasoning Support for Fantasy Sports and Betting Enthusiasts.
back  
topic
NY Post
New York Post
15 Aug 2023


NextImg:I was bullied for being tall — now men pay me to be an ‘Amazonian Goddess’

She’s head and shoulders above the rest.

A British woman who spent decades being bullied for her 6-foot-1-inch frame says she’s finally found self-confidence — and an unusual income stream — by flaunting her height on TikTok.

Lucie Tabitha, 35, recently began showing off her body on the social media app and now makes more than $10,000 a month filming fetish videos for men who dub her an “Amazonian Goddess.”

“I have a lot of fans who are into the giantess fetish,” the statuesque stunner told Southwest News Service on Tuesday. “They like to be trampled on and dominated by me or cared for like a little pet, sometimes they like to be eaten by me.”

“I make custom videos to role-play this and I even have a tiny camera that connects to my phone which I can put in my mouth to give a real-life experience to my videos,” she continued. “A lot of people enjoy the thought of looking up to me and being smaller than me and me being able to control them.”

Tabitha charges fans up to $500 for a custom video, in which she satisfies their bizarre requests, such as pretending to stomp on or eat them through the camera lens.

Tabitha charges fans up to $500 for a custom video, depending on the specific type of content they request.
mediadrumimages/@lucie.tabitha
“I was constantly bullied for my height growing up," Tabitha admitted. "I was often picked on, called names and generally made fun of because of it and it made me absolutely hate being me."
“I was constantly bullied for my height growing up,” Tabitha admitted. “I was often picked on, called names and generally made fun of because of it and it made me absolutely hate being me.”
mediadrumimages/@lucie.tabitha

The blond Brit never believed she’d be praised — and paid — for her height after being teased since she childhood.

“I was constantly bullied for my height growing up,” Tabitha admitted. “I was often picked on, called names and generally made fun of because of it and it made me absolutely hate being me.”

The content creator claims people often made remarks intended to be humorous, such as “How’s the weather up there?” and “Can you come help plaster my ceiling?”

Dating was also difficult due to her height.

“Men are often intimidated by me,” she declared. “I’ve had a lot of men ask me not to wear high heels on dates or tell me they feel silly next to me because I’m so tall.”

“I feel like I’m often made to feel less important or less attractive because I’m so much taller than average and I also think some men see tallness as a masculine thing and not something for a woman to be,” she added.

“Men are often intimidated by me," she declared. " “I’ve had a lot of men ask me not to wear high heels on dates or tell me they feel silly next to me because I’m so tall."
“Men are often intimidated by me,” she declared. ” “I’ve had a lot of men ask me not to wear high heels on dates or tell me they feel silly next to me because I’m so tall.”
mediadrumimages/@lucie.tabitha
Last year Tabitha stumbled across "TallTok" — a subculture on TikTok whereby tall women unashamedly show off their long legs. She soon found the confidence to flaunt her own statuesque frame.
Last year Tabitha stumbled across “TallTok” — a subculture on TikTok whereby tall women unashamedly show off their long legs. She soon found the confidence to flaunt her own statuesque frame.
mediadrumimages/@lucie.tabitha
Tabitha is seen at right posing alongside one of her shorter pals. The British beauty wears a pair of sky-high heels to accentuate her height.
Tabitha is seen at right posing alongside one of her shorter pals. The British beauty wears a pair of sky-high heels to accentuate her height.
mediadrumimages/@lucie.tabitha

Women have also been equally cruel to Tabitha.

“I’ve heard girls walking past me before say ‘I’m glad I’m not tall like that’ and I often hear people snigger especially if I am in high heels,” she forlornly declared.

However, last year Tabitha stumbled across “TallTok” — a subculture on TikTok whereby tall women unashamedly show off their long legs.

“I braved myself up and posted a TikTok of me in high heels showing how tall I am and it had a positive reaction which helped grow my confidence and the longer I’ve done it the more confident I feel,” she cooed.

“Now I love my height, I feel like I can wear the high heels and I wish I hadn’t wasted so much time worrying and not wearing them," Tabitha exclaimed.
In fact, the leggy lady now wishes she was even more statuesque and regularly wears sky-high heels that make her more than 7ft tall.
mediadrumimages/@lucie.tabitha
Now I love my height, I feel like I can wear the high heels and I wish I hadn’t wasted so much time worrying and not wearing them," Tabitha exclaimed.
Now I love my height, I feel like I can wear the high heels and I wish I hadn’t wasted so much time worrying and not wearing them,” Tabitha exclaimed.
mediadrumimages/@lucie.tabitha

In fact, the leggy lady now wishes she was even more statuesque and regularly wears sky-high heels that make her more than 7-feet tall.

“I don’t feel like my height is my weakness anymore I feel like it’s my strength and I really never ever thought I would like my height,” she stated. “I felt like it was a curse I’d have to deal with for my whole life.”