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This study employed a qualitative research approach, involving in-depth interviews with 15 Bangladeshi British OnlyFans models who engage in black market work. The participants were recruited through social media and online forums, ensuring anonymity and confidentiality. The interviews explored the models' experiences with the platform, their motivations for engaging in black market work, and the challenges they face. Stop waiting for permission

This paper explores how British-Bangladeshi fashion and commercial models utilize social media (primarily Instagram and TikTok) to navigate the dual pressures of ethnically specific branding and mainstream marketability. Using a qualitative content analysis of posts, captions, and engagement metrics, alongside semi-structured interviews with emerging and established models, the study identifies three primary content archetypes: the Cultural Ambassador (celebrating heritage via traditional fashion/modest wear), the Assimilated Professional (minimizing ethnic markers for mass-market campaigns), and the Activist Model (politicizing identity in response to Islamophobia or racism). Findings suggest that algorithmic visibility often rewards hybridized content that tokenizes but does not stereotype—creating a narrow "halal exotica" niche. The paper concludes that while social media democratizes access to bookings, it simultaneously imposes new forms of racialized labor, where models must constantly recalibrate authenticity for both diaspora and white-majority audiences. The participants were recruited through social media and