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Health2 min(s) read
Published 18:45 18 Jul 2026 GMT
Escort Amy Wilde has opened up about one of the most shocking experiences of her career, revealing how taking part in an extreme sex act left her seriously ill.
Speaking on an episode of The Reality Check Show podcast, hosted by Shuan Maroof and adult performer Demetri Dionysus, the 25-year-old recalled filming a threesome after meeting a couple while she was in Australia. As she began telling the story, Wilde said: "Oh my god. So I was in Australia and I met this couple. So we were filming. So we did the threesome."
She went on to explain that the group began collecting saliva in a bowl during the encounter. After host Shuan Maroof interrupted to ask, "Collecting what spit?", Wilde clarified: "The spit from like the blow job and we spat in the bowl."
According to Wilde, the situation became increasingly extreme as the encounter continued. She said the man ejaculated over the two women before they licked it from each other's faces and spat it back into the bowl.
She then claimed they moved into a bathtub, where the man urinated on them and into the bowl. Wilde said she mixed everything together before attempting to swallow it.
Recalling the moment, she said: "I put it in my mouth intending to swallow it. I gagged it back up because the piss was hot and the spit and the cum was cold and it was all starting to separate and I was holding it and I gagged it back up."
Despite her initial reaction, Wilde said she decided to try again, telling herself: "'No, I can do this.' So I put it in my mouth and I swallowed it. It was vile."
Wilde said the second woman had no interest in following suit.
"And then I gave the bowl to the other girl. She was like, 'I'm not drinking that,'" Wilde recalled, before claiming: "So then I put it in my mouth and I spat it all over her."
Wilde later said the experience had a serious impact on her body and left her extremely unwell afterward.
Medical experts advise against ingesting bodily fluids because doing so can expose people to bacteria and other infectious organisms. While urine from a healthy person is often considered low risk when it leaves the body, it is not guaranteed to be sterile and can become contaminated, particularly when mixed with other bodily fluids.