: In a clinical context, the interest is referred to as urolagnia. You can find medical or psychological papers on PubMed or Google Scholar by searching for "urolagnia and media consumption."

Instead of using colloquial terms, try searching for these phrases on academic databases: "Consumption of urolagnic media content" "Psychodynamics of paraphilic interests in digital media"

"Commercialization of niche fetishes in the creator economy"

If you are looking for research material or academic analysis regarding this type of mature media content, you might find better results by looking into these specific academic frameworks:

Searching for academic or formal "papers" on this specific niche can be difficult because most scholarly research groups it under broader categories like , urolagnia , or the study of niche digital subcultures .

: Some media studies papers analyze this content through the lens of bodily autonomy, power dynamics, or the "abject" in art and media.

: Researchers often look at how niche genres evolve in digital spaces. Journals like Porn Studies (Routledge) frequently publish papers on the consumption habits and production of fetish-based media.