Sophie Rain Shocks Fans After Revealing She Made $82 Million In 18 Months – Claims Her Earnings Rival LeBron James As NBA Champion Weighs In
The NBA offseason is usually filled with trade rumors and training camp buzz. But this week, headlines took an unexpected turn when internet model Sophie Rain revealed she has earned nearly as much money as LeBron James, and her comments quickly drew fire from an NBA star.
“$82 Million in a Year and a Half”
During a recent livestream, Rain stunned viewers by claiming she made $82 million in just 18 months through her online content business. She even compared the figure to the annual earnings of global sports icons like LeBron.
The revelation went viral, sparking debates across social media. Among those who weighed in? Denver Nuggets forward Michael Porter Jr.
Porter Jr.: “It’s Pathetic”
Speaking on a show with PlaqueBoyMax, Porter didn’t hold back.
“It’s a little bit pathetic that the guys are giving her $50 million, brother. And they’re guys who probably have wives and kids and they’re in their rooms being weird. To me, that’s crazy.”
He went further, questioning the authenticity of the business itself. “These girls are OF models. It’s not even them writing and talking to these guys.”
Sophie Rain Fires Back
Rain wasted no time responding, turning Porter’s words back on the NBA world.
“I just think it’s funny how men can dribble a ball and cash $30 million checks without anyone considering it pathetic. But if a woman builds a business from scratch and makes more than some MVPs, suddenly it’s a moral crisis.”
She also defended the grind behind her success: “They love to act like it’s all smoke and mirrors, but nobody handed me a contract, a coach, and a brand deal at 19. I was working 14-hour days, answering every DM, editing every post. Nobody faked that effort.”
Final Word
The back-and-forth highlights a growing debate over modern fame, money, and what counts as “real” work.
For Sophie Rain, the numbers speak for themselves. For Michael Porter Jr., the business model raises uncomfortable questions.
Either way, when someone claims LeBron James-level earnings, the conversation is bound to get loud, on and off the court.