She was one of the most famous adult entertainment actresses in the world at the height of her fame.
But four years on from her last big role in an adult film, Jenni Lee's life is now very different.
The former model has made her home in the 200 miles of tunnels that snake beneath Las Vegas and its famous Sunset Strip.
With no running water, Jenni shares her meagre living space with some of the most vulnerable and dangerous people in society.
Her only source of light is a torch and Jenni, whose real name is Stephanie Sadorra, huddles into a tiny corner of her home.
After vanishing from the limelight a crew of Dutch documentary film-makers found her living in her underground bunker while they were filming for a show.
The stumbled across Jenni by accident, who confessed who she was.
When asked whether she found success as a pornstar, she said she was "a little too successful".
“I actually got very famous. I should still be in the top 100 on some list somewhere. I used to be so hot."
And while the adult actress's circumstances have dramatically changed, she told film-makers there were advantages to living in the tunnels underneath Sin City.
She explained: "It’s not as difficult as you might think, everybody’s really respectful. Everybody’s good to each other, which I don’t think you find much.
"I’m happy, I have everything I need here. People are more accepting [underground].”
Jenni was just 19 when she shot to fame as a model. She started out filming adverts before making her first adult film when she was 21.
Since then, more than 130million people have watched her films and her profile on an adult film site still has tens of thousands of subscribers.
Jenni didn't explain how she went from rubbing shoulders with fellow Penthouse and Hustler models to living below ground.
But she insisted that hardships she faced in the tunnels, which are at constant risk of flooding, like running water created a sense of community.
Jenni said: "I like that those hardships build camaraderie. I feel like you make more genuine friends.”
Former EastEnders star Ross Kemp himself filmed a hard-hitting documentary in the Vegas tunnels and met some of the characters who have made it their home.
Back in 2014, for his Extreme World series for Sky in 2014, he spoke to some of the hundreds of people who share their home with rats and scorpions.
Jazz and Sharon both have drug problems and had made a choice to move underground.
Jazz, a meth-addict, told Ross: "I drink and I f**k with the meth amphetamine... I gamble.
"Sometimes that's how we make our money, by gambling. You lose more mostly so with the drug and everything I have to, food and this and that, it's tough.
"It's a 24-7 town. Vegas is crazy."
Sharon is both a mother and a grandmother and admits her children don't approve of her life choices, although she still visits them regularly.
In 2003, murderer Timmy TJ Weber hid in the underground tunnel from police after killing his girlfriend and 15-year-old son. He is now on death row.
When it rains, the tunnels often flood with water sweeping away the make-shift living arrangements people have been able to create for themselves.
For Angell, who has lived in the tunnels for five years, there is just one rule "don't die in my tunnel".
She has seen some gruesome sights during her time underground and says murders have been committed away from the daylight.
Angell added: "It's hard to shake me, but the worst thing I saw down here was an artist who lived down here getting his fingers cut off by another homeless person."
Heartbreakingly, she admits the last time she took a shower "I cried".
Others have tried to make the best of the devastating situations. Tommy and Shay, a married couple originally from Hawaii, have decorated their section with posters from their home State.
They have a mattress, some boxes, and cartons to site on and even own a small heater for boiling water.
Shay said: "You can't tell whether it's day or night. Sometimes, when our clock says six o'clock, you don't know whether it's six o'clock in the morning or in the evening. If some light comes in at the end of the tunnel, we know - it's daytime."
Rusty was forced into the tunnels when no landlords would rent a home to her husband. Determined to be with him, she followed him underground.
She said: "In the beginning, I liked it here, but not anymore. The others don't really accept me as one of them. They poisoned my dog — he almost died."
When Jenni Lee's fans found out about her plight, they launched a crowd funding appeal to get her the help she needed to get out of the tunnels.
It said: "We are trying to raise funds to help her get medical treatment, pay for a safe shelter and get any other assistance she might need on the way out of there.
"With the money raised we will approach professionals who have experience with these situations, especially in the Las Vegas area."