Dolezal frames her pivot as a legitimate career move for someone trying to rebuild after public humiliation. She's emphasizing her 300 hours of coursework toward certification and positioning herself as someone who wants to help underserved populations — specifically single mothers and busy parents — improve their intimate lives.
The internet is having an absolute field day with this one. Critics are quick to point out the irony: a woman who built an entire false identity around 'helping' Black communities is now selling sexual wellness services. OnlyFans was apparently her first post-scandal money move, and many observers note she never fully disappeared from the spotlight — she's been cultivating this reinvention for years.
Dolezal (now going by Nkechi Diallo) spoke to the Daily Mail on May 11, 2026, confirming nearly 300 hours completed toward her sex coach certification. She was exposed as a white woman posing as Black in 2015 during her tenure as NAACP Spokane chapter president, and has since pivoted to adult content platforms before this latest career announcement.
Dolezal's latest reinvention is audacious even by her standards — but whether clients will actually book sessions with someone who's become a punchline remains the real question. After burning every bridge in mainstream America, she's betting that controversy converts to curiosity.
Rachel Dolezal — who now goes by Nkechi Diallo — has found her latest chapter, and it's decidedly more intimate than her previous ventures. The former NAACP Spokane chapter president, whose career was derailed after she was exposed as a white woman who had been presenting herself as African American, is now pursuing certification to become a sex coach. In an interview with the Daily Mail published May 11, 2026, Dolezal revealed she's completed nearly 300 hours toward her certified sex coach qualification.
She told the publication she's specifically targeting single mothers and busy parents as her clientele base — populations she believes need greater access to sexual wellness guidance. "Can we agree to disagree and still respect each other and allow each other to provide for our families, and not have this need to keep me — or anybody else — punished forever?" Dolezal said in the interview. The announcement comes years after Dolezal became a national punchline following her 2015 exposure as a white woman who had built an elaborate persona around identifying as Black.
At the time of her unmasking, she was serving as president of the NAACP's Spokane chapter and had previously claimed to be of African American descent. The scandal destroyed her professional reputation almost overnight, forcing her to seek new income streams. According to TMZ's reporting, Dolezal initially turned to OnlyFans — the adult content subscription platform — to make ends meet after her public downfall.
That pivot generated its own share of attention and criticism, with many observers noting she seemed to be leaning into her notoriety rather than attempting rehabilitation. Now she's attempting another transformation, this time positioning herself as a professional sexual wellness practitioner. It's unclear how much business Dolezal will actually attract if her certification comes to fruition.
The sex coaching industry remains largely unregulated in most U.S. states, and potential clients searching for practitioners would likely encounter significant skepticism before booking a session with someone whose public identity has been so thoroughly tied to deception. One has to imagine the intake conversation at her practice will be... interesting. Whether this latest career pivot represents genuine reinvention or simply another chapter in Dolezal's ongoing saga of self-reinvention remains to be seen. What's certain is that she shows no signs of fading into obscurity quietly — and for better or worse, Rachel Dolezal continues to refuse to become a forgotten cautionary tale.