In the vast and prehistoric landscape of social media, where memes roar like tyrannosaurs and trolls lurk like velociraptors, a figure has emerged that has shaken the foundations of a toxic ecosystem: #DinoMommy. Reysuka XO, a palaeontologist with a doctorate, dinosaur researcher, and OnlyFans content creator, has not only unearthed fossils in remote excavations but has just dug up – and exposed – the fragility of incel ideology. Her viral response to a misogynistic tweet has unleashed a storm: thousands of likes, reposts, and, of course, an avalanche of hatred that reveals more about her detractors than about her. Is this the collapse of an obsolete archetype? Let's break it down, bone by bone.Who is #DinoMommy? A Palaeontologist with Sharp Fangs
Reysuka XO is no ordinary influencer. With a Ph.D. in palaeontology earned after 11 years of intensive studies and a two-year postdoc, this "Dino Mommy" combines scientific rigour with a playful charisma that has won over more than 300,000 followers on TikTok. Her educational videos – from the bone morphology of an Edmontosaurus to debates on whether T-Rexes hunted in packs – are interspersed with adorable dinosaur cosplays, all under the motto
In a field dominated by men – where only 12% of palaeontologists are women – Reysuka doesn't just survive: she thrives. Her "Dino Mommy" brand transforms science into something accessible and sexy, attracting an audience that would otherwise ignore an academic paper. As she herself explains on Instagram, her content is not a detour from science but its fuel: "I fund my research through content creation".instagram.comIt's pure empowerment: using her body and intelligence to unearth prehistoric truths.The Trigger: A Misogynistic Meme and a Legendary Response
It all exploded on 20 October, when Reysuka responded to a toxic meme about "the girl from school who sleeps with everyone but can't get a boyfriend." Instead of ignoring it, she flipped it like an asteroid into a crater: "Me! 11 years of university + 2 of postdoc for a Ph.D. in palaeontology. Still researching dinosaurs. My OnlyFans funds my science. Dino Mommy
The post went viral in hours: 9,000 likes, 184 reposts, and over 327,000 views. Yahoo News covered it as "the internet arguing over a palaeontologist building the 'Dino Mommy' brand".
But fame brings predators. The backlash arrived swiftly, led by incel corners of X (formerly Twitter), where the narrative is clear: women on OnlyFans are "dumb sluts" without ambition. One with a doctorate who uses digital sex for science? That doesn't fit their binary script of "pure virgin vs. degraded whore."The Wave of Hatred: The Incel Collapse in Real Time
The hatred didn't take long to arrive. In the replies and related posts, the incels – or at least their echoes – unleashed a storm of body shaming ("fat", "4/10", "pig torta"), slut shaming ("cosplaying whore bag"), and attacks on her credibility ("does she really have a Ph.D.?").
One went so far as to say: "Enjoy being alone in your 40s," while another accused her of "sexualising education" and attracting "horny men" to dinosaurs.
International Business Times called it "the Dino Mommy scandal": an OnlyFans creator whose claim of a Ph.D. in palaeontology unleashes an "uproar" between sex and science.
Why so much panic? As one reply on X points out: "You've triggered every incel on the internet... dinosaurs were their last safe space away from evil females."
Reysuka shatters the stereotype: she's not the dumb, dependent "OF girl," but an educated woman who manages her finances like an expert – remember that women lead the finances in 80% of "traditional" households that incels so idolise. Criticising her "dependence on subscribers" ignores basic economics: every product needs consumers, from scientific grants to Twitch streams. And while they pay for porn in secret, she bills real science.
The collapse is evident: posts like "Lil incel" or "Shut up incel" flood the replies, turning the insult back on the haters.
It's pure projection: insecurity in the face of a woman who monetises her sexuality without shame, funding a legacy they'll never touch.The Counterattack: Female Support and Empowering Parallels
Reysuka doesn't back down. She responds with sass: "Lamest way in the book to try to shame a woman... I'm clearly a bombshell."
Her fans – many women – back her up: "Incels still haven't figured out their shitty attitudes are the reason for their 'condition'."
It's an echo of cases like #DoctoraSensual, the Mexican doctor Jovanna Isabel Ortega, who used OnlyFans to supplement her meagre hospital salary. Fired for "moral scandal," she won the lawsuit and now fuses daytime consultations with nighttime content: "Medicine by day, seduction by night." Both demonstrate that digital sex work is a tool, not a trap – and that women are masters of administration.
Inkl sums it up: the backlash is "an example of deeply rooted sexism in science," where questioning a woman's credentials because of her sexuality is an age-old tactic.Implications: Breaking Stereotypes in the Digital Age
This drama goes beyond Reysuka. It exposes how incels – condemned to "watch porn and pay for whores," as one tweet says – project their resentment onto women who choose their own paths. Empowered? Yes, because she turns hatred into virality: more followers, more subscriptions, more funds for fossils. While they froth from anonymous basements, she educates on bone morphology and body positivity.
In STEM, where harassment is endemic, #DinoMommy is a beacon: more women like her could make palaeontology less stuffy and more inclusive. And for the incels: the asteroid has already fallen. Evolve or go extinct.Conclusion: The Roar of Dino Mommy
#DinoMommy doesn't seek approval; she unearths truths. Her incel collapse is her victory: a reminder that intelligence + sexuality = unstoppable power. While the internet argues, she cashes in – and us, do we keep digging in the past or embrace the future?