TLDR;
- LanaRhodes stats are loading correctly for all her accounts.
- The $1M challenge is very fishy, and that kind of money attracts scammers.
- Self-tipping is not allowed, but I wouldn't be surprised if some studios get a pass.
- LanaRhode seems to be collecting tickets like she found a game cheat code.
- Is the prize real?
EDIT: I apologize. You can still pull up her "old" info on this site, but it's been merged with her new account name. Her accounts were not merged because all her 3 known accounts are indeed different accounts. If she had changed her name but still held the same account ID, the bot would rename her account, and loading the old name would redirect to the new name. All her 3 names are accessible on different URLs:
From what I understand from your comments, LanaRhodes stopped camming to be a studio manager. That is why the last activity on her account was in 2024 (I am ignoring the 6 minutes she was online in 2025). Now, she returned with a new account, only four days before the Round 9 was over and somehow a member started tipping a lot since her first day. She got 37 tickets, and ended up winning $100,000. Let me repeat, she joined as new model after almost 2 years offline, and in just four days, someone tipped her so much that she collected 37 tickets, and won $100,000. All that in just four days.Since the current round started (Round 10), about 3 days ago, LanaRhode has not been online yet, but she already got 154 tickets. That is more tickets than the second, third and fourth models combined.Knowing LiveJasmin, if she is cheating and they are not part of the scheme, they will not let her take $1,000,000 home. If it were a $1,000 prize, they wouldn't even waste time investigating. But a $1M prize they won't hand out without being sure the winner didn't cheat or without being part of the scheme. That being said, if the winner is able to bring business to the table, say, a bunch of high rollers that can spend twice that amount in a couple of months, then they won't do anything, and the $1M will be just a payment for her to bring these big spenders. LiveJasmin does not throw a big prize like that without a sure ROI.But on the other hand, if she is able to bring people who can spend $1M in a few months, why would she bring them to LiveJasmin and lose a big chunk to fees? It would be a lot more profitable to do "Skype" shows and take payments via BTC.Too bad the bot collecting data on public tips on LiveJasmin died a long time ago. This could give some insights into this RH2839. If he is a new member with deep pockets whom Lana brought in to spend money on LiveJasmin, then LiveJasmin won't do anything. This is the exact type of members they want models to bring. But if "he" is Lana herself or her studio, LiveJasmin won't like it because "he" won't continue spending money after the contest. Self-tipping is forbidden in the rules. But again, if her studio has been doing business with LiveJasmin for some time, and has already generated more than $1M, I wouldn't be surprised if LiveJasmin would allow them to self-tip.Is this fishy? Hell, yes! Very fishy. But this is still money going to LiveJasmin. No matter how she gets those tips, a big chunk of them is going to LiveJasmin. Unless this is a stolen credit card, LiveJasmin doesn't really care and won't do anything about it.But, if this is all real, and and the winner is a Romanian studio model, I am 100% sure she won't get the full amount. There will be a short list of "middlemen" and mysterious people known simply as "the real owners," about whom nobody dares ask questions. They will take their cut first, and the model will be the last one to get anything, and her cut will be the smallest.That, of course, if the prize is even real. This can be all rigged. They may not have any intention to pay $1,000,000. They make sure she wins, pay her only 10% or something to be part of the fake contest, and that is it.