published on in Celeb Gist

Michelle Cline booted from school's pickup for OnlyFans sticker

Explore More

It’s sticker shock.

A Florida mom of three has been banned from dropping off and picking up her young from a Florida Christian school because she advertises her lucrative OnlyFans account on an oversize car decal.

Michelle Cline, 35, told The Post she is now forced to walk her children across a busy street to get them to class — and that some parents want her family expelled from Liberty Christian Preparatory School in Tavares altogether.

“I don’t think it’s right,” she said. “People are going to be offended by all sorts of things, different bumper stickers, whatever. But at the end of the day, this is something that supports my family.”

Cline, who previously worked in assisted living facilities and as a beautician, first launched the explicit venture — which clears up to $20,000 a month — roughly three years ago.

“It’s only me and my husband,” she said. “No one else is brought in, male or female. We always were into cameras in our bedroom, so we said, ‘Hey, let’s make some money off of this.'”

The oversize sticker has sent shockwaves through a Florida Christian school. Courtesy of Michelle Cline

To boost business, Cline — who goes by “Piper Fawn” online — placed a large decal on the back of her SUV emblazoned with her OnlyFans account address roughly two years ago.

Several parents began to take note of the sticker during pickup and drop-off at the religious school, and word began to spread about Cline’s vocation.

“There were whispers,” she said, noting that she has two children in the school — one in elementary and one in middle. “Kids would make jokes about it but nothing serious.”

A source told The Post that a student was expelled for looking up Cline’s page on his personal phone on school grounds last year.

Michelle Cline and her husband film explicit videos for paying subscribers. Courtesy of Michelle Cline

Fellow parent Lexy Thomas — herself a TikTok parenting influencer with more than 220,000 followers — told The Post that school administrators have refused to address a slew of complaints about the decal.

Thomas argued that it promoted pornography on school grounds, and violated the school’s Christian-based code of conduct.

Earlier this month, administrators informed Cline that she could no longer drive the SUV onto school property, relegating her to a parking lot across the street.

She said she has complied with the directive — but said she has no plans to pull her kids from the school.

TikTok influencer Lexy Thomas is demanding Cline’s expulsion. TikTok/@blendedlyblessed

Thomas is demanding the family’s expulsion, asserting that the school’s principal is failing to follow its own rules. Taking to her TikTok account, she flashed explicit still images from Cline’s page in making her point.

“She can do what she wants on her own time,’ she said. “I have no problem with that. But we’re talking about a school and kids seeing this. That’s a different issue.”

Thomas told The Post that the offending vehicle has been spotted on campus from time to time since the ban, and that the school should take more stringent action.

Cline said she has no plans to remove her kids from the Christian school. Courtesy of Michelle Cline

Another parent told The Post that she’s mystified by the school’s mild reaction to the OnlyFans promotion.

“We have enough things to worry about as parents, enough damaging things we do our best to shield our kids from,” she said. “Now I have to look at it in the drop-off area and have my kids ask what this site is. At a Christian school.”

Cline said she wants to keep her kids enrolled in the private institution because she feels they’ll be better protected from taunts than at a public school.

Administrators at Liberty Christian College Preparatory School have banned Cline’s vehicle from campus. Google Maps

“We’ve been open with them about what we do,” she said. “If there is any issue at school, we tell them to ignore it, not to talk about it. We’ve communicated that with them.”

Cline said she films her videos at a studio outside her home and that the children aren’t in proximity.

“I think we are teaching them a good lesson,” she said. “Not to stop doing something just because people are offended. I’m teaching them to stand up for themselves.”

The school declined to comment.

ncG1vNJzZmimqaW8tMCNnKamZ2Jlf3V7j2pmbGlfo7K4v46fo6iqmZmubrnOpmSbp5%2BpsqV5xaumpmWjmLWwu8usZKmhk6DCsXnAq5yaZZakv2680aikqKyZo7RutMSrZKimnK6zorrSZqanZZiav26vwKtm