{"version":1,"type":"rich","provider_name":"Libsyn","provider_url":"https:\/\/www.libsyn.com","height":90,"width":600,"title":"Episode 368: Two Tabs, One Artist- Keeping Your Spicy Work Separate (and Safe)","description":"The Art of Keeping Things Separate This topic comes up more than people admit. Usually in a whisper. Or an email that starts with, \u201cThis might be a weird question\u2026\u201d It\u2019s not weird. It\u2019s just complicated. A lot of actors are working in NSFW or spicy spaces. Erotica audiobooks. Adult games. ASMR. OnlyFans. Patreon. Sensual storytelling. And at the same time, they\u2019re booking e-learning, commercials, family-friendly narration, children\u2019s content. The work itself isn\u2019t the problem. The overlap is. So I want to talk about how to keep those worlds separate in a way that\u2019s professional, grounded, and sane. Not from a morality angle. From a business one. Why This Feels So Loaded Most of the discomfort doesn\u2019t come from the work. It comes from fear. Fear of being judged. Fear of being misunderstood. Fear that one client will see something they weren\u2019t meant to see and make a snap decision about you. And honestly? That fear isn\u2019t irrational. Algorithms don\u2019t understand nuance. Brand managers don\u2019t scroll thoughtfully. Google definitely doesn\u2019t care about context. So when people ask, \u201cShould I be hiding this?\u201d what they\u2019re really asking is, \u201cHow do I protect my career without betraying myself?\u201d That\u2019s the real question. What Separation Actually Is Separating your spicy work is not about shame. It\u2019s about clarity. You\u2019re not hiding your art. You\u2019re organizing it. Just like authors use different names for different genres, actors can use separate identities for separate audiences. A pseudonym. A distinct brand. A different website, email, and social presence. Both are real. Both are you. They just serve different people. When everything lives in one place, clients get confused. And confused clients don\u2019t book. Clear clients do. The Practical Line in the Sand A few things matter more than people realize. Separate branding. Different headshots, colors, fonts, tone. If one side of your work says PBS and the other says sultry midnight headphones, they should not look related. Separate metadata. File names, tags, credits. This is where people accidentally connect dots they never meant to connect. Separate systems. Emails. Phone numbers. Invoicing if you can. Boundaries get easier when logistics support them. None of this makes you secretive. It makes you intentional. When the Worlds Almost Touch This is the moment that spikes everyone\u2019s nervous system. Someone recognizes your voice. A link gets shared accidentally. A client stumbles across something unexpected. Here\u2019s the rule. Don\u2019t panic. If you\u2019re comfortable acknowledging it, a simple line works: \u201cI work in multiple genres under different names to keep my projects organized.\u201d That\u2019s it. No explanation tour. No justification. You\u2019re allowed to run your business like a business. And if you\u2019re not comfortable bridging those worlds, quiet consistency does the work for you. No cross-linking. No wink-wink posts. No mixing lanes just this once. Something We Don\u2019t Talk About Enough Adult performance work can take real emotional energy. Just like screaming in video games. Just like intense drama. Just like anything that asks your nervous system to open. So recovery matters. Boundaries matter. Choice matters. Doing one kind of spicy work does not obligate you to do all of it. Your comfort line is allowed to move, but it\u2019s also allowed to exist. Take care of the system holding all of this. One artist. One body. One brain. A Thought I\u2019m Sitting With People assume separation means being two different people. I don\u2019t see it that way. I see one whole artist with range and boundaries. Different lighting. Different outfits. Same integrity. The goal isn\u2019t secrecy. It\u2019s sovereignty. You decide who sees what, where, and when. That\u2019s not avoidance. That\u2019s professionalism. If you want to train your voiceover craft in a grounded, professional space,&amp;nbsp;Voiceover Gyms&amp;nbsp;is where we do that. Learn more about the classes here: https:\/\/www.actingbusinessbootcamp.com\/actor-training-program You can always reach me at&amp;nbsp;mandy@actingbusinessbootcamp.com&amp;nbsp;, and if Voiceover Gyms feels like the next right step, keep an eye on your inbox. I\u2019ll let you know when doors are open. 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