A GLAM influencer has given two reasons why she was offered a US visa, despite Trump’s crackdown.

Canadian influencer Julia Ain said she showed off her best assets in the application, meant for “artists with extraordinary ability”.

NINTCHDBPICT001053093913Canadian influencer Julia Ain said she showed off her best assets for the applicationCredit: Instagram/@qveenjuliaa NINTCHDBPICT001053094347Ain described her online presence as a ‘funny Jewish girl with big boobs’Credit: Instagram/@qveenjuliaa

The 25-year-old submitted a video of herself eating a pastrami sandwich in a low-cut shirt while asking sultry questions.

And her application was granted.

This makes her one of about 20,000 people allowed into the country in 2024 on an O-1B visa.

She told The Times: “Yes, that video was submitted to the US government.”

Adding: “Maybe my extraordinary talent is just having big boobs.”

It comes amid Donald Trump’s crackdown on those entering the US, with more than 100,000 foreign visas revoked in 2025, according to the state department.

In 2024, the department revoked 40,000.

The O-1B visa was originally brought in as a way to keep star John Lennon from being deported to England in the 1970s.

It was then officially adopted by the US in 1990 to attract foreigners with “extraordinary ability in the arts”.

In her busty clip submitted to immigration officials, Ain sits with a blond pal at Katz’s Deli.

The pair ask: “Would you rather: one night with us or a year’s supply of this sandwich?”

Also posted to her socials the video racked up more than 11million views, 226,000 likes and 58,000 comments.

Online interaction can boost applicants chances, demstrating commercial success to officials.

Ain, who described her online presence as a “funny Jewish girl with big boobs”, said the video served as proof that “people are watching”.

Many of her videos flaunt her cleavage as she roams New York alongside fellow members of the creator group self-titled “milk mansion”.

Applicants bidding to get into the US must meet a series of criteria.

This includes proving national renown, high earnings in their field, or a history of critical or commercial success.

Immigration lawyers have recently reported an uptick in content creators coming to them for help.

NINTCHDBPICT001053094344Aim brushed off critics saying her content brings revenue to the US economyCredit: Instagram/@qveenjuliaa NINTCHDBPICT001053094350Aim is one of a growing number of influencers claiming artistic skill for a visaCredit: Instagram/@qveenjuliaa

Some estimate as much as 65 per cent of clients express their artistic skill by stripping half naked on the internet.

Ain brushed off critics saying: “Whether you personally think that I’m untalented does not matter because all of the numbers and everything prove that I’m somebody who is bringing revenue into the US economy.”

Arguing her case to move to the states, Ain said she wanted to be in New York – “the hub of Jewish culture”.

She said her humour was indented to combat rising antisemitism around the world.

Immigration lawyer Michael Wildes, who secured O-1 visas for the likes of Sinead O’Connor and Boy George, said the “space has evolved with the times”.

He told The Times: “It’s not just people doing sexy things or new things,” he told the Times.

“It’s creating industry and keeping America one step ahead of everybody else in the world of entertainment and culture.”