Home Australia OnlyFans sensation Renee Gracie outlines what needs to happen for Australian motorsport to thrive in the coming years

OnlyFans sensation Renee Gracie outlines what needs to happen for Australian motorsport to thrive in the coming years

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OnlyFans sensation Renee Gracie believes Australian motorsport should follow the F1 model and launch a series of all-female academies
  • Renée Gracie insists women are not respected in Australian motorsport
  • Sport is being urged to follow F1’s lead and launch a series of all-female academies
  • Gracie, 29, started OnlyFans in 2019, the leading adult entertainment star
  • He also competes on the GT World Challenge Australia circuit.

OnlyFans sensation Renee Gracie believes Australian motorsport should follow the F1 model by launching an all-female academy series.

Gracie, 29, who competed in the Bathurst 1000 twice before embarking on a career in the adult entertainment industry, said now was the right time for change.

What F1 is trying to do is to applaud what it is doing: offering an elite pathway for women to compete against the likes of Max Verstappen and Lewis Hamilton.

‘TO“After seeing the F1 Academy and how amazing it’s been, I mean, if Australian motorsport isn’t copying what they’re doing, it’s obvious they just don’t care,” he said. Wide world of sports.

Gracie, who is also currently competing in the GT World Challenge Australia, added that there is still a need for AFLW and NRLW style racing.

“If you really put something into it for women, then suddenly women feel like they have their safe space, they feel like they’re comfortable, they feel like they’re happy, just like the AFLW and football right now,” she added.

“If there’s nothing in the pipeline and the plan is to not have anything involving just women in motorsport at this stage in the near future, I think that’s a clear representation of how they feel about women in motorsport.”

In May this year, Gracie stated that she would never return to the V8 grid because she feels disrespected.

OnlyFans sensation Renee Gracie believes Australian motorsport should follow the F1 model and launch a series of all-female academies

Gracie, 29, who competed twice in the Bathurst 1000 before embarking on a career in the adult entertainment industry in 2019, said in her recently released documentary on Stan that she experienced sexism when she was competing as a V8 driver.

Gracie, 29, who competed twice in the Bathurst 1000 before embarking on a career in the adult entertainment industry in 2019, said in her recently released documentary on Stan that she experienced sexism when she was competing as a V8 driver.

“Unfortunately, I don’t think much has changed in Australia around women in general,” she told News Corp.

‘Obviously I (personally) put a target on my back by having OnlyFans as a sponsor.

“But that’s okay… I’m happy to take on the heat.

“But I will say this… I have been bullied in person, people have called me fat and ugly to my face, to this day.”

She called her 2019 decision to pursue adult content creation “life-changing” and has no regrets about the decision that turned Gracie into a highly polarizing figure.

It is understood that Gracie also has the support of her father when it comes to explicit content, as he “manages her business accounts, so he knows exactly what’s going on”.

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