In the quiet streets of Pensacola, Florida, where tourists go to soak up the Gulf Coast vibes, one local woman turned a pair of cozy Airbnb rentals into her personal filming set.
In what can be desribed as the one of the most unhinged content hustle of the year, 31-year-old Nicolette Keough, a Pensacola resident, is facing two felony counts of criminal mischief after police say she rented two properties on North Guillemard Street (both owned by the same unsuspecting host) and proceeded to urinate all over everything in sight.
The damage? Well over $5,000 across the two locations, with one unit alone tallying nearly $4,000 in ruined goods.
She allegedly posted the raw footage to an adult content website, banking on strangers paying to watch her mark her territory like some form of performance art.

The act was discovered when the Airbnb host received a frantic tip through the app from someone who claimed that their current guest (Keough) was urinating on multiple items inside the property.
Curious and horrified at the same time, the owner dug around online and stumbled upon videos of a woman doing exactly that: squatting over a familiar antique Crown Royal chair, a typewriter, four dining room chairs, a coffee maker, a bed, a TV, a record player, a toaster, and even an electric fireplace.
To make sure the information was right, the host arrived to the Airbnb location, and there, the strong, unmistakable stench of amonia still hung heavy in the air.
Not done with trashing just one unit, Keough had apparently hit the second Airbnb on the same street too, drenching a vase, a green rug, an accent wall, another chair, and a tiger-print rug for an extra $1,375 in amonia-based destruction.

Pensacola police didn't waste time.
Upon receving the complaint, they managed to track her down, arrested her that same Sunday, and charged her with felony criminal mischief since the total tab exceeded the felony threshold. She was booked into Escambia County Jail and later released on a $5,200 bond (which some are saying is too low), flashing what headlines have called a "devilish grin" in her mugshot, as if she likes that she knew the internet was about to eat this story alive.
What makes this saga even wilder is the cold calculation behind it.
According to the arrest report, Keough wasn't just relieving herself in a moment of desperation or drunken haze; she was consicous, and deliberately filmed the acts for profit, turning someone else's property into her makeshift studio.
"There was a young lady inside making money in a very unusual way that damaged somebody else’s property," the police said.
"There’s a list of items including a television, a record player, a coffee pot, some bedding, some carpeting, I believe, and a rug."
The host documented the carnage, from the soaked upholstery that would never smell the same to the electronics that shorted out or simply became biohazards.

Airbnb moved fast once the complaint landed.
The company immediately removed Nicolette Keough from the platform. Airbnb explicitly bans guests from using listings to create commercial pornography or any paid sexual content, including filming adult videos. It also prohibits illegal acts such as vandalism and unauthorized commercial filming. These violations alone were enough to get her banned.
A spokesperson stated: “This kind of behavior has no place on Airbnb. We’ve removed the guest from our platform and are continuing to assist the host with their reimbursement request through our AirCover damage protection for hosts.”
Property damage incidents like this are rare, but hosts are backed by 24/7 support.
AirCover for Hosts provides up to $3 million in damage protection, which is included with every booking and covers the cost of cleaning and replacing the urine-soaked furniture, rugs, electronics, and other ruined items.

Still, no amount of reimbursement erases the violation of trust, or the sheer gross-out factor of realizing one's rental was used as a pee palace for pay-per-view.
Since then, the story has exploded across the web and social media, with people shaking their heads at another "only in Florida" moment that feels too bizarre to be true. Some are laughing at the absurdity of it all, while others are left wondering what drives someone to risk felony charges, a permanent Airbnb ban, and public humiliation just to chase a few bucks from niche adult content.
Whatever her motivations, Nicolette Keough has etched her name into the annals of rental horror stories, proving that in the gig economy of the internet age, even the most basic bodily functions can become a business model.

In the world of OnlyFans (and Fansly where Keough is active, as well as on some other adult websites), the pressure to stand out can be unnerving.
While some platforms let creators keep a huge percentage of their earnings and skip traditional studios, OnlyFans in particular exploded into a $7.2 billion business in 2024 alone. Yet the money is wildly uneven: a tiny elite creators rake in fortunes while most creators earn very little. This harsh reality has pushed many to chase subscribers by pushing every boundary, anything from extreme fetishes to bodily fluids, just to keep the tips and renewals flowing.
And watersport that those that include urine content thrive because it's widely regarded as raw taboo.
For her part, Nicolette Keough's alleged Airbnb stunt fits that desperate playbook perfectly since most of her content fits that niche. And at this time, she's already the Fansly's 'Top 250' in both September and December of 2025.
However, the aftermath of this kind of act is brutal when it happens anywhere but the toilet.
Outside the body, urine quickly breaks down into ammonia, creating a sharp, penetrating stench that soaks deep into fabrics, rugs, wood, and upholstery. The odor lingers for weeks or months, and can reactivate with heat or humidity. Salts and proteins help urine bond permanently to surfaces. Even after cleaning, a UV blacklight reveals the hidden residue glowing fluorescent green or blue, exposing every drop like forensic evidence that no ordinary scrub can fully erase.
As Keough’s case moves forward, it stands as a raw reminder of how far some people will go for clicks and cash, and how the rest are left scrubbing up the mess.
Related: Kelli Tedford, The OnlyFans Model Who Gained Notoriety By Relieving Herself Online