KEY POINTS

  • Renee Gracie says she is very different from the sexual persona she portrays online
  • Gracie has no regrets in her decision to switch careers
  • The porn star’s new career is helping her set herself up for an early retirement

Renee Gracie has admitted that she is not really into sex despite being popular for making porn content. She even called the videos she shares "fake."

The racer turned porn star spoke with Grant and Chezzi Denyer in their "It's All True" podcast on Oct. 18. During their conversation, Gracie revealed that she is a very different person compared to the one she is portraying online.

"People think I am the horniest thing in the world," Gracie said.

"It’s so far from the truth. I am with my partner, but in general... It’s all just fake. It’s put on."

Gracie has also admitted to making explicit videos with her boyfriend saying that "it's what we do anyway." She told fellow OnlyFans star Gina Stewart that her boyfriend is fine with what she does and he appears in her videos and she pays him for it.

Even if her new career is very different from what she really is, Gracie has no regrets about her decision to do porn. She is one of the superstars on OnlyFans and is making $500,000 a month. The lucrative switch has helped her plan her life ahead as she’s thinking of having "an early retirement."

"I cannot regret bettering myself and putting myself in that position,” she added.

In the same interview, Gracie slammed Supercars for the way it treats woman in the sport. Gracie was the first female driver to join the sport in 14 years and she was the first Australian woman to compete full-time in Supercars.

She felt that they were using her as "sex sells" figure and they benefited from it. However, they were not supportive when she switched careers.

"For years I raced in development series and Supercars wanted to promote that I was a woman racing," the former racer said.

"I was this ‘sex sells’ figure. They wanted to benefit from it. Now I’m in the industry I am, and I’ve made the change, they want nothing to do with it.”

Also, there has been no other female driver since she left Supercars in 2017. So, she is not convinced with Supercar's effort in encouraging more women to join the sport.

"They claim to promote women. They push it. They want a female so bad, but at the same time, they don’t really," Gracie said.

Renee Gracie
Renee Gracie driver of the #360 Harvey Norman Super Girls Nissan Altima poses for a photo prior to practice for the Bathurst 1000, which is race 21 of the Supercars Championship at Mount Panorama on October 8, 2016 in Bathurst, Australia. Getty Images/Daniel Kalisz