OnlyFans model McKinley Richardson breaks silence on “humiliating” Vegas vows with YouTuber Jack Doherty — the viral wedding that ended in heartbreak
When McKinley Richardson and YouTuber Jack Doherty streamed their surprise Las Vegas wedding to millions, it looked like another influencer fairytale built for clicks. The 22-year-old OnlyFans model and the 21-year-old prankster had made a name turning every moment into content — fast cars, flashy trips, and livestream stunts that drew massive audiences. But what happened on that wedding stage in November 2024 would change everything.

As cameras rolled and the internet watched, Doherty delivered vows that stunned even his biggest fans. What was supposed to be a moment of love quickly turned into public humiliation. He joked that Richardson would get “nothing in the divorce even if I cheat,” claimed ownership of her OnlyFans earnings, and warned that she couldn’t “talk to another guy for 250 years.” He ended by ordering that she would still “cook, clean, and do my laundry.” Viewers laughed, clips went viral, and within hours millions had replayed the moment — but for McKinley Richardson, it wasn’t funny. It was devastating.
In her first major interview since the breakup, Richardson described the moment as “one of the most humiliating experiences” of her life. She said her father, who had attended the ceremony, walked out in tears. “He told me it was the most embarrassing thing he’d ever seen. I wanted to disappear,” she admitted. Behind the glitz and influencer lifestyle, Richardson says the relationship was built on control. According to her, Doherty pushed her to post more explicit content online, isolated her from friends, and turned their relationship into a livestream circus.

By spring 2025, the couple’s whirlwind romance had crashed. Richardson packed up and left the $3.5 million Fort Lauderdale mansion they had purchased together. Doherty downplayed the split, calling it “complicated but real,” but Richardson paints a different picture. She says she left to reclaim her privacy, her confidence, and her peace of mind. “It was never love — it was business,” she said quietly.

The story of McKinley Richardson and Jack Doherty became a cautionary tale for a generation raised on social-media fame. Millions tune in to watch influencers fall in love, fight, and fail — but few stop to consider what those moments do to the people living them. Richardson now says she’s focused on rebuilding her life offline, staying close to her family, and using her story to remind other young women that viral attention isn’t worth your dignity.
While many of her followers supported her decision to leave, others accused her of chasing sympathy. Still, even critics admit one thing — the footage of Doherty’s vows remains one of the most uncomfortable viral wedding moments ever posted online. It captured not just a relationship collapsing in real time, but the emotional toll of a culture that treats love like entertainment.

In the months since the breakup, Richardson has spoken openly about the pressure to turn every private emotion into public content. “People think fame makes you powerful,” she said. “But when you let the internet run your life, you lose everything that’s real.” Her story may have started with laughter, but it ends with something much deeper — a young woman taking back control of her name, her career, and her worth.


