It’s sticker shock.
A Florida mother of three has been banned from dropping off her children at a Christian school in Florida after advertising her lucrative OnlyFans account on an oversized sticker on her car.
Michelle Klein, 35, now has to walk across crowded streets to take her children to class, and some parents are moving her family to the Liberty School in Tavares. He told the Post that he is considering removing him from the Christian Preparatory School completely.
“I don’t think that’s right,” she said. “People will be offended by all sorts of things, different bumper stickers and things like that. But at the end of the day, this is what supports my family.”
Klein, who previously worked in nursing homes and as a hairdresser, first launched this blatant business (which can earn up to $20,000 a month) about three years ago.
“It’s just me and my husband,” she said. “No one else is going to take us, men or women. We’ve always been into bedroom cameras, so we said let’s make money with this.”
To promote her business, Klein, who goes by “Piper Fawn” online, put a large decal with the address of her OnlyFans account on the back of her SUV about two years ago.
Word began to spread about Klein’s vocation when some parents started noticing the stickers on their way to and from the religious school.
“There were whispers,” she said, noting there were two children at the school, one in elementary school and one in middle school. “The kids joke about it, but it was nothing serious.”
Last year, a student was expelled from the school for looking up Klein’s page on his personal cell phone, sources told The Post.
Lexi Thomas, a fellow parent – herself TikTok parenting influencer It has more than 220,000 followers and told the Post that school administrators have refused to address numerous complaints about the decals.
Mr Thomas argued this encouraged pornography on campus and violated the school’s Christian-based code of conduct.
Earlier this month, administrators informed Klein that he could no longer drive his SUV on school property and drove him to a parking lot across the street.
She said she was following the directive, but said there were no plans to pull children out of school.
Thomas is demanding his family’s expulsion from the school, saying the principal is not following the school’s own rules. She used her TikTok account to flash explicit still images from her Klein page to make her point.
“She can do whatever she wants on her own time,” she said. “I don’t have a problem with that. But we’re talking about the schools and the kids who are watching this. That’s a different issue.”
Mr Thomas told the Post that since the ban, offending vehicles have been occasionally seen on school grounds and schools should take tougher action.
Another parent told the Post they were perplexed by the school’s muted response to the OnlyFans promotion.
“There’s a lot to worry about as a parent, and a lot of harmful events that we’re doing our best to protect our children from,” she said. “Now we have to see it in the drop-off area and have kids ask what this site is. At a Christian school.”
Klein said she would like to keep her children in private school because she feels it protects them from ridicule more than attending public school.
“We’ve been open with them about what we’re doing,” she said. “If there’s something wrong at school, we tell the students to ignore it rather than talk about it. We told them that.”
Klein said she was filming the video in a studio outside her home and her children were not nearby.
“I think we’re teaching them a good lesson,” she said. “Don’t stop doing something just because people are offended. I’m teaching them to stand up for themselves.”
The school declined to comment.

