The sign blocking access is clear: “The pool is closed for a private event.”
Look past the sign and you, a curious civilian — that is, someone who is not part of the adult industry — trying to get a peek inside the well-guarded Miami Beach hotel, would see some of the most desired bodies online on OnlyFans and other top premium fan platforms, here very much IRL taking selfie videos, arranging content collabs (both NSFW and SFW “for the ’gram”), sharing marketing tips, catching up with industry news, and generally cavorting and schmoozing under an enormous magenta and cyan sign spelling out the name of the event organizer, the adult trade publisher XBIZ.
Against this very much peak May 2026 backdrop, however, a corporate drama is playing out, one the people in this pool understand better than many of the mainstream media analysts covering it.
Leo Radvinsky — the adult industry visionary who took OnlyFans from just one among many fan platforms to pretty much total porn-world supremacy, gaining a seat at the table of bona fide billionaires in the process — died in March at 43 after a battle with cancer. His widow, Katie Chudnovsky, a lawyer and venture investor with no visible prior profile in the adult industry, now controls the multibillion-dollar business through the family trust her husband structured before his death. She recently approved the sale of 16 percent of OnlyFans’ parent company, Fenix International Ltd., to San Francisco-based Architect Capital, a financial firm that specializes in lending to tech companies.











