SHE’S the daughter of boxing champ Tyson Fury and wife Paris.
And Venezuela Fury largely appears to enjoy being in the spotlight.




But accompanying fame comes scammers trying to make a few quid off the back of it – with the teenager hitting back in a video on her TikTok page.
“So today I’m going to be addressing all of the fake accounts that have been made of me,” the 15-year-old began.
She then held up her iPad with a TikTok profile pulled up on it, as she said: “So this is not my account for one.
“That’s fake and it’s weird, so please report it.
“My only TikTok account is Venezuela Fury Official my only Instagram account is Venezuela Fury Official.
“And yeah, so any other accounts they ain’t me, they’re fake.”
She went on to slam those “behind” making the copycat profiles.
“Whoever’s behind them, you’re sad, you’re really sad,” she sighed.
“And anything that gets said or posted or anyone gets messaged on them accounts, it’s not me.
“So yeah, turn a blind eye to that.”
[bc_video account_id=”5067014667001″ application_id=”” aspect_ratio=”16:9″ autoplay=”” caption=”Venezuela Fury: The Next Big Thing in Modelling ” embed=”in-page” experience_id=”” height=”100%” language_detection=”” max_height=”360px” max_width=”640px” min_width=”0px” mute=”” padding_top=”56%” picture_in_picture=”” player_id=”default” playlist_id=”” playsinline=”” sizing=”responsive” video_id=”6361189162112″ video_ids=”” width=”640px”]“It’s sad tbh,” she captioned the video.
Venezuela has 267.7k followers on her official TikTok account, and almost 92k on her Instagram.
And in the comments section on the TikTok, her fans urged her to try and get a “blue tick” next to her name – indicating that her profile been verified by the social media site.
“You should verify your tt page and get the blue tick beside your name,” one wrote.
“Shouldn’t you have a blue tick?” another questioned.
“You’ve been on TV!”
“Try and get verified hun,” a third commented.
As her fans praised her for raising awareness of the fake profiles, and insisted they were reporting every one they came across.
“Thank you – I was so confused which one’s real,” one person wrote.
“That’s so sad!” another raged.
“It’s so stupid that people do that,” a third agreed.
“Sad people are trying to be you,” someone else added.
“Nobody beats the original.”
“I got messaged on that account they called me loads of horrible names for asking if that was a fake account, which it was and is, and then they blocked me,” another sighed.