Every time I think we’ve finally moved on from policing women’s body hair, a tabloid pops up to prove me wrong. This week it’s a TikTok creator who dares to do the unthinkable: she wears tiny bikinis while having visible armpit and bikini-line hair. She posts pool clips and holiday snaps to hundreds of thousands of followers, and the internet predictably loses its entire mind over her bush.

Martina Peach hairy

According to the article, she refuses to shave. She’s perfectly happy with her body hair, still wears skimpy swimsuits, and doesn’t crumble when strangers call her “gross” or demand to know why she would choose to look like that. Naturally, there are also loads of comments calling her gorgeous and telling her to keep doing her thing. Because the internet can never agree on anything for more than three seconds.

Sound familiar? If you’ve spent any time around Babestation, whether that’s on TV, on Cams, or lurking in the comment sections, you’ve seen this exact debate play out again and again.

The same tired argument on repeat

These articles always follow the same script. Woman stops shaving. Woman posts pictures. Internet splits in half.

One side screams that she’s disgusting and needs to shave immediately. The other tells her she looks incredible and shouldn’t change a thing. In this case, the usual gems showed up. Comments like “body hair is scary” and “one question… why?” sitting right next to “very beautiful” and “I love bush, maybe just trim it”.

Honestly, it’s basically a Babestation chat room condensed into one bikini video.

This isn’t niche anymore, no matter how much tabloids pretend it is

The article also points out that more women, especially younger ones, are skipping the razor entirely. One study claims almost one in four women under 25 don’t shave their armpits. Big brands like Adidas and ASOS are using models with visible body hair too. So what used to be treated as shocking is quietly becoming normal.

Hairy armpits.

Natural bikini lines.

Women saying “actually, I’m fine like this, thanks”.

The only reason it’s still framed as controversial is because mainstream media is always about ten years behind real life.

What this has to do with Babestation (spoiler: everything)

Once you strip away the faux outrage, the article is really about body autonomy. A woman deciding what she does with her own body. Full stop. It’s also about double standards. Men’s body hair is dull and unremarkable. Women’s body hair apparently deserves a headline and a comment war. And finally, it’s about confidence. Because whether people admit it or not, they’re clearly drawn to her. Millions of views do not happen by accident.

On Babestation, we see the same thing every day. Nude models who keep things natural attract fans who are absolutely obsessed, alongside the odd troll who cannot cope with anything outside their personal fantasy. Babes who are totally smooth get their own flavour of nonsense, from accusations that they’re only doing it “for men” to praise for looking exactly how they want. In every case, the only opinion that actually matters is the woman’s.

Bush, smooth, or somewhere in between. Trolls don’t get a vote

Reading the nastier comments, I couldn’t help laughing at how predictable they were. If she shaved tomorrow, those same people would just find something else to complain about. Her body, her age, her clothes, her confidence. That’s the thing about trolls. They don’t really care about the hair. They care about not being in control.

Martina Peach hairy pink bikini

So here’s the Reede Fox rulebook.

You’re allowed to love a full bush.

You’re allowed to prefer smooth.

You’re allowed to change your mind every other week.

What you’re not allowed to do, if you want to be taken seriously, is act like your preference is a rule everyone else has to follow. On Babestation, the girls decide how they groom, how they dress, and how much they show. Viewers decide who they watch, who they tip, and who they become regulars with. Nobody gets to decide what another person is “allowed” to look like.

Why the “bikini bush girl” actually matters

So why am I, a former Babestation babe, even talking about a random influencer in a tabloid article? Because she proves something I’ve been saying for years. There is clearly an audience that loves natural body hair. There is clearly an audience that hates it. And the world keeps turning regardless.

For fans of the natural look, it’s a reminder that you’re not weird or alone. Mainstream media literally cannot stop writing about the thing you like. For everyone else, it’s a reminder that the hottest part of these stories is never the hair. It’s confidence. It’s the moment someone says, “This is my body. I’m doing it my way. Deal with it.”

If that doesn’t sum up the Babestation vibe, I don’t know what does.

Final word from your favourite fox

Whether you’re cheering her on or clutching your pearls at her bikini choice, that girl in the article is doing something very simple and very right. She’s living in her body on her own terms, tabloids and comment sections be damned. And on Babestation, we’ll keep backing babes who do exactly the same, whether they’re full bush, smooth as glass, or somewhere gloriously in between. Your job as a fan is easy. Find what you like, support the women who rock it, and leave the “you’re gross” routine in the bin where it belongs.

Love, Reede XOXO

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