[2] The show was produced after a friend of More offered her large countryside house for a shoot and was filmed in four days during the COVID-19 pandemic in the United Kingdom.
The series was co-presented by Matthew Camp,[1] with whom More had commandeered the queer brand Daddy Couture in September 2019,[3] and was intended as a celebration of sex work and as a safe space for people to be themselves.
[8] They were described on the programme as Slags,[6] a term in British English equivalent to slut,[9] in order to reclaim the word as sex-positive.
[1] Shot on a tight budget[11] and featuring specially composed tracks as a soundtrack,[7] the first series used many personal friends of the Cock Destroyers as guests including its narrator Chase Icon[12] and ran for four episodes.
[8] The series also featured conversations about tokenism, fetishism, racism, violence against transgender people, and sexual consent[14] and was marketed on its inclusivity,[15] with its confessionals annotated with both the Slags' names and pronouns.
Anderson's illness meant that this was aborted and replaced by a points-based system, with eliminations removed;[23] the first episode featured Royale Gaga giving a distracted More a pep talk.
[15] Writing between broadcast of the first and second episode, Emma Kelly of i-D described the show as "one of the most genuine representations of sex workers and queer, trans and non-binary people ever seen on TV".
[7] Barry Pierce of Dazed wrote that the series was "a truly glorious celebration of the self with positivity and inclusivity as its central tenets" and stated that one scene, in which Anderson unsuccessfully tried to storm off set in high heels following an inability to send anybody home and ended up crawling off set, was a contender for his "television moment of the year".