BostonJock's Delicate Balancing Act — Corporate by Day; Adult Content Provider by Night
When Lucas Storm left the Navy in 2019 after some 17 years, he decided to pursue one of his fantasies: creating adult content. It was then that BostonJock was born, a moniker he has kept with for the past five years. "I didn't think it would go anywhere. So I just came up with this kind of obvious moniker —I am bodybuilder who I lives in Boston. By the time I realized that it was actually going somewhere, it was too late to do a rebrand. I had a full-time job and creating content was kind of a hobby, if you will."
Seeing the muscular Lucas today makes it hard to believe that he weighed 110 pounds in 2011. "I started working out when I was 26, Obviously being in the military, the focus was on being fit, but not on building muscle mass. I am 5'7", When I decided to be fit conscious, I quit smoking and drinking, and chose to put on some muscle mass. Today I weigh 190 pounds." His other stats are a 42.5" chest; 53" shoulders; and a 32" waist.
Today Lucas sits in the top 6.9% of OnlyFans providers and the top 7% of JustFor.Fans, and in addition to his custom content, has worked for such adult entertainment companies as Bait Buddies, Men Over 30, and RawFuckClub and with such well-known performers as Rafael Alencar, Avatar Akyia, Jordi Massive, Jason Luna, Bobby Knight, Magic Mike Hung, Adam Snow, Mateo Muscle, and Serge Shepard. But despite his success, he would hardly call himself an overnight sensation when he joined JustFor.Fans and OnlyFans five years ago.
"For the first nine months I had one follower on JustFor.Fans. (Laughs). The same was true on OnlyFans, and he was a friend of mine! A very supportive friend I had met online a year before. But as I got more followers on social media when I began do collaborations. And the more the videos circulated, the more followers I would get, and they slowly converted to subscribers. Then when I began to do collabs with some of the bigger names in the business, I would get a good boost. But it has been a long, slow process."
What led him to do adult content was his wish to act out on some secret desires. "I've always had a little bit of like an exhibitionist and into various kind of kink. And it was always a fantasy of mine for people to watch me have sex. That was one of the draws for me to start filming. It was a turn on. But it was weird for me at the start is to interact with the camera as though it was the audience when doing solo videos, and I had to adapt. But since I've really shifted more into doing collabs with other people, that pressure has gone away because you forget the camera is there. We just do our thing."
It was those collaborations that helped him build his audience, but he was a bit apprehensive about performing with others at the start. "I was a little nervous because I didn't know what to expect, but my first collaboration was with a very sweet couple — which was funny, because it was a three-way; but they were very nice guys who had been doing content for years and they showed me the ropes about how they did their filming. From there it was going with the flow, so to speak, and taking their lead. I did feel kind of nervous about me not pulling my weight, but that went away quickly."
Like many adult content creators, Lucas finds himself balancing a day time career, in his case a corporate trainer in the energy industry, with his nighttime work. "I have my, you know, I have my day job my day identity. I have my nightlife and the pulling world. And they have crossed paths, not very often, but they have. And that has been interesting. A couple of my co-workers know about what I do. In fact, one of my co-workers has actually helped me edit videos and has been a cameraman for me when I was in a pinch. It has been an inside joke between us. But mostly I keep my careers apart. For instance, when they ask me at my day job what I did over the weekend, I give a vague answer. Like this past weekend I went to New York City to work with a studio and do a couple of collabs, but all I said was I went to New York City for the weekend. I try to keep them separate. You know, don't let a lot of the information out. But I have run into people from my company in Provincetown when I was working a gig — it was someone I recognized from the office whom I don't work closely with. We had an interesting conversation — short and sweet, but I said I really hoped my appearance didn't get around the office."
Does he see any similarities between the performative nature of his two careers? "There is to some degree. I am Is the corporate trainer. I'm you know, presenting material in teaching people how to do a job. Whereas, as a content creator, I'm showing people what my sex life looks like, so there I mean there's a performance aspect to it. But I see them as very different things."
Asked which he prefers, he's quick to make a choice. "The corporate trainer position is more of a position of convenience. This is a job I found in which I fit very well into, but I am really not tied to a corporate job. But I really enjoy making the content. It's a fun experience, and it would be hard to convince me to step away from the doing it. So I think I probably have more loyalty or more favoritism towards filming content than I do my day job. The day job pays the bills."
But it is not performing in front of the camera that he likes the most, rather the camaraderie he feels with his peers in the industry. "I think it's the connections and that the people that I like the most, because there's a lot of genuinely nice people out there that are filming content. But for me going to meet some of these people, especially some of the bigger names and the guys that have been doing this a long time, can be little intimidating for the first time But I've made genuine connections with some and found we have similar interests, such as food. And I am surprised by that."
As for his fans, he delights when he recognized in public. "I love when I'm out of the club, doing an appearance or just having a good time, and someone comes up and says, 'Hey. I want you to know I am one of your subscribers and I love your content.' That is a really cool experience, and like I usually chat with them for a while."
Since having ended his relationship with his fiancé, Lucas has attempted dating only to learn that his adult career is something of a dealbreaker. "First of all, my partners obviously need to be comfortable with me filming content and me having sex with other people. I am very capable of separating a romantic relationship from my content work. Actually, I started my content pages when I was with my ex-fiancé. We had a long conversation before I started it to make sure that he was comfortable with it. We had ground rule set up so that we were on the same and I would check in periodically to make sure. That is, that he was still comfortable with what I was doing. When I started looking to date again, my content work became a huge consideration. And I learned a lot of people aren't okay with it. I found that there were several people that I met who wanted to date me, but they weren't okay with me filming content. if I have had to make a choice, I will choose content. So, it limits the options of people that are available."
While progress has been made to normalize adult content, such judgment against it isn't suprising. Even Olympians, such as Matthew Mitcham (amongst others) have received criticism the same thing, which Lucas sees as unfortunate. "I think those attitudes are very close-minded. Society is a whole I think is still stuck in Puritanical ways of not letting people live their lives and be happy. So, it doesn't surprise me that it's happening at the Olympics as well. These people don't see how somebody else can have differing values than theirs. I think it's a real shame that those folks are being as close-minded and trying to instill their values what they see is acceptable or appropriate or normal on other folks. I'm a big fan of the living live and let live if it is not hurting you."
Lucas knew he was attracted to other boys when he was 10 or 11 and messed around some while in high school; but didn't accept he was gay until he was 21; and even then was very careful about sex. By then he was in the Navy, having joined after high school to become a nuclear reactor operator, and the Clinton era policy of "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" was firmly in place. He recalls it cast a long shadow on those in the military. "A lot of people don't realize that there were some very strict, very aggressive policies around it. I have some friends that spend time in the brig because they were found on base kissing their boyfriend. They went to a military prison because they were found kissing. I had a commanding officer that made very public threats to the whole crew if he found out that any of us were gay. He said he would make sure that we suffered for it and throw us in the Brig. It was not a good situation.
"I was very deeply in the closet while I was in the Navy. But when 'Don't Ask. Don't Tell' was repealed in in 2013, it became a more tolerating environment. Still there were people still very unhappy about it. Not much they could do about it. I stayed I stayed very deeply in the closet until 2017 when I finally came out to my command because of some things that were going on. My commanding officer at the time encouraged the gay men under his command to be more open about their sexuality. He felt that as a senior enlisted serviceman we could help the junior enlistees that were gay. I had a private conversation with him and told him I was gay and in a relationship. Though I wasn't comfortable making that public knowledge, I was willing to help. Long story short. He ended up convincing me to come out to the command. It was probably the worst decision of my entire life. If given the chance to go back, I would never have agreed to do it. It was not a safe and comfortable environment. I know plenty of people who were having sex all over the base, doing all this crazy stuff, and didn't get caught, I applaud them. That was not my experience."
In the Navy he was placed on a nuclear submarine where he was a nuclear reactor operator, an elite technician he was attracted to when recruited after high school. "I thought it sounded really cool and flashy — not that I understood exactly what it entailed." That was, he recalls, working in the hot, tight environment of a submarine's engine room. "It's like being in Industrial power plant. A lot of steam. A lot of oil. And very little space. And in the front half where we live is cramped. You don't have a whole lot of room for personal stuff. Privacy is not really a thing because everybody's cramped together. It's a small tight environment that's not for the claustrophobic at all. We had times when we were underwater for a long period of time. The longest was 78 days. No sun, no fresh air. When you come back up and you see the sun for the first time it's a little disorienting."
And don't expect Lucas (or Boston.Jock) to move out of the city that he's named himself for. "Like I said, when I got out of the Navy, I was engaged to my fiancé who was born and raised here and had a house. That was 2019 and I got a job here. I changed jobs in 2020 in the middle of the pandemic, which was really, well, interesting. I didn't break up with my ex until the end of 2022, but I had a job and had made friends so decided to stay. So here I am."
For more on Lukas Strong (aka Boston.Jock), visit his Slink Page on Instagram.