OnlyFans creator McKinley Richardson has publicly addressed her split from YouTuber and prankster Jack Doherty, describing their brief marriage as emotionally damaging and “humiliating.”
In a two-part interview on The Camilla Araujo Podcast, 22-year-old McKinley Richardson detailed her relationship breakdown with Jack Doherty, whose online stunts and livestreams have attracted more than 15 million subscribers.
Camilla Araujo, who interviewed with her friend McKinley, emphasized that the two-part episode would not be monetized. She said she has no intention of profiting from McKinley’s experience, explaining that it is not her story to tell, only her friend’s. Araujo added that her goal was simply to provide McKinley with a platform to share her own story in her own words.
The couple’s highly publicized Las Vegas wedding, streamed live in late 2024, quickly turned into a spectacle when Jack Doherty delivered what he called “vows,” written as a prank.
Before a live audience of millions and with Mckinley's family in attendance Doherty declared, “So, shawty gets absolutely nothing when I divorce her, even if I cheat. If she cheats, she automatically owes me $10 million. I’ll also receive 100 percent of her OF revenue moving forward, even if we divorce.”
He went on to add that she would not be allowed to “speak to any other men for 250 years” and would still be expected to “cook, clean, and do my laundry.”
The ceremony, which was reportedly not legally binding, sparked immediate backlash online. Viewers questioned whether the “vows” were part of Doherty’s ongoing brand of prank-based content or a genuine display of control.
Speaking on the podcast, McKinley Richardson said she and her family were blindsided. “The vows that he wrote in front of my dad—he made my dad stand up center stage—and he read out these disgusting vows,” she recalled. “It was embarrassing. We were humiliated. My dad actually cried that day.”
McKinley described how the relationship deteriorated after the wedding, alleging Doherty’s controlling behavior extended into her professional life. She said he pressured her to continue creating content on OnlyFans and sought control over her earnings.
During the interview, she also recounted an incident in which a friend of Doherty’s allegedly assaulted her while she was asleep after a night of drinking. She said Doherty later severed ties with the friend, but the incident left her traumatized.
By May 2025, Richardson had left the couple’s $3.5 million waterfront home in Fort Lauderdale. “He wasn’t the same guy I fell for,” she said. “In the beginning, he was respectful and protective. But it turned into something toxic. I felt trapped.”
Doherty addressed the breakup in an appearance on the George Janko Show podcast earlier this year, confirming the relationship was “real” despite public skepticism.
“If I didn’t livestream as much as I did, maybe things would’ve been different,” he said. “There was a lot of mixing relationships with business.”
McKinley Richardson, who has since updated her OnlyFans bio to read, “Yes, I’m single & yes you can leave a cuddle buddy application in my DMs (if you dare 😉),” told Araujo she hopes sharing her story will help her move on.
“When she started describing what she went through, I felt sick,” Araujo said. “She didn’t just go through a bad breakup. She went through emotional abuse.”
The viral wedding video remains one of Jack Doherty’s most viewed uploads. For McKinley Richardson, however, it marked the moment she realized the difference between content for an audience and the reality she was living behind the scenes.
McKinley has since begun to move forward with the support of her close friends. She is also reclaiming control of her personal brand, now reaching more than 14 million followers across YouTube, Instagram, TikTok, and Snapchat, with her content surpassing 3 billion total views.
You can follow McKinley Richardson on X at @mckinleyrichx