Tiffany Stratton doesn't shy away from being honest about the unfiltered side of professional wrestling fandom. During her appearance on NASCAR All Access with The Schmo at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, the WWE Champion opened up about some of the strangest fan interactions she receives on social media — and they get weird fast.
The Unsolicited Request Wave
When it comes to DM culture, Stratton is all too familiar with the pattern. She's developed a straightforward answer for fans who cross the line.
"I've had a lot of people ask for fee pics. I think that's pretty weird."
What makes her take refreshing is that she's not embarrassed or offended — she's just honest about how often it happens. For someone in her position, inappropriate requests aren't some rare occurrence; they're part of the job description as a high-profile female WWE talent.
The Foot Pic Question: A Comedy Gold Moment
When The Schmo pressed her specifically on foot pictures — one of the internet's most infamous bizarre fan obsessions — Stratton pivoted to humor rather than straight refusal. Her answer was a masterclass in shutting down the request while keeping things light.
"No, I do not send fee pics. Not free — but maybe $9.99, $10.99, $11.99 plus tax. Never. Never."
The comedic non-answer does two things at once: it makes clear that the answer is absolutely no, while also poking fun at the absurdity of the request itself. It's the kind of response that shows Stratton has heard this so many times that she's turned it into a bit.
Why Female Athletes Get the Brunt of It
The reality of being a prominent female wrestler — or any female athlete with a social media presence — is that strange requests, inappropriate DMs, and boundary-crossing behavior come with the territory. Stratton's willingness to address it publicly on a platform like The Schmo's show is important. It normalizes the conversation around what female wrestlers deal with behind the scenes.
Most female talent won't openly talk about the weird stuff their fans send them. Stratton breaking that silence, even with humor, puts a spotlight on something that's rarely discussed in mainstream wrestling coverage.
