A former chauffeur who worked around Italy’s political elite says she has “flipped the power dynamic” by stepping into the adult industry on her own terms.
Raissa Bellini, 37, from Sardinia, Italy, says she spent years in high-end circles, transporting VIPs linked to politicians and the wealthy.
“Before social media, my life was already unfolding inside environments most people only read about in headlines,” Raissa told NudeNewz.
“I worked as a private chauffeur in Italy, driving VIP clients at the highest levels of power and wealth.”
Raissa claims some of those passengers were close to Silvio Berlusconi during the period his private life became international news.
“Among them were politicians, celebrities, and close associates of Silvio Berlusconi during the period when his private life and infamous sex scandals dominated international news,” she said.

But she says what she witnessed behind the scenes was far removed from the polished public image.
“I wasn’t just driving limousines, I was transporting the people who moved in and out of those secretive worlds,” she explained.
“I saw how power actually operates behind closed doors: the excess, the entitlement, the silence that money buys.”
After her time chauffeuring, Raissa’s work took her even deeper into luxury environments, including serving as a stewardess on yachts owned by Russian oligarchs.
“Extreme wealth combined with unchecked behaviour,” she said.
“Unwanted advances were routine. Boundaries were constantly tested. Professionalism was expected from me, but rarely returned.”
Raissa later worked on farms in Australia, before ending up in Miami, where she also worked in a strip club.
She says the locations changed, but the behaviour did not.

“Whether in palaces, yachts, or strip clubs, I learned that men with power behave the same everywhere,” she said.
“The only difference is who gets paid, and who gets silenced.”
Now, Raissa says she has chosen a career where she controls the terms.
“After years of being surrounded by powerful men who felt entitled to women’s bodies without accountability, I decided to reverse the equation,” she said.
“I realised something radical: the same desire that had been used to control, intimidate, or quietly exploit women could become a source of power when reclaimed openly.”
Raissa started creating content around six months ago and entered professional adult film work three months ago.
And she says the response has been immediate.
“Social media gave me visibility almost instantly, my Italian accent, my confidence, and my refusal to play small went viral,” she said.

She claims the adult industry has felt more transparent than the worlds she worked in previously.
“The contrast was striking,” Raissa said.
“In the adult industry, everything is explicit, negotiated, and consensual, unlike the ‘respectable’ worlds of politics and billionaires I had known before.”
Raissa describes her brand as “MILF energy” and says she brings a performance-driven edge to her work.
“I’m not selling youth or fantasy, I’m selling presence,” she said.
“I’m a MILF with a life lived intensely, and that history gives my sexuality weight, irony, and control.”
She says some reactions from people around her have been revealing.
“Success didn’t just change my lifestyle, it exposed people,” Raissa added.
She also claims men from her past suddenly began resurfacing.

“Former school bullies resurfaced decades later,” she said.
“And several married men messaged me to confess they’d ‘loved me for years’ and regretted marrying their wives.”
Raissa says her life has changed dramatically since entering the industry.
“I bought my first Lamborghini, relocated internationally, and even received a luxury apartment in Dubai from a loyal fan,” she said.
But she insists the biggest change is not the money, it’s autonomy.
“I now decide how I live, who has access to me, and what I support,” she said.
Raissa also says she has thrown herself into animal welfare and currently cares for two rescued monkeys.
Looking ahead, she says she has big ambitions.

“My goal is to dominate the adult industry in a way that’s impossible to ignore,” she said.
“I want awards, mainstream recognition, and my work to be cited as genuinely different, not just successful.”
Her advice to new creators is blunt.
“Don’t trust blindly, and always get paid in advance,” she warned.
“Talent and discipline don’t protect you from people with bad intentions.”
And she says her mindset today is shaped by everything she witnessed before.