Juliette Porter revealed that starring on Siesta Key “shaped” who she is — and padded her checking account in the method.
Porter, 28, recalled being 17 when she filmed the MTV pilot before attending Florida State University with the dream of becoming a lawyer.
She said throughout the Monday, August 11, episode of the “Trading Secrets” podcast that after the series was picked up in 2017, she was only 19 and shortly her life trajectory modified, noting that being an attorney is just not who she was “at my core.”
Porter claimed that in season 1 of the truth show, which followed a young group of friends within the Florida city, she made $1,500 an episode, totaling roughly $20,000 for the season.
“I feel season 2 I made about $60,000. But we did double the quantity of episodes,” she shared, confirming that her pay scale continued to go up before the show led to 2022 after five seasons.
Porter claimed that she’s now “a billionaire” due to becoming a reality TV star so young. Her pivotal role because the series’ narrator also helped her earn more money.

“I’d narrate it, and we might all should receives a commission for the sake of fairness the identical episodically,” she recalled.
The JMP The Label founder explained she “tried to fight it” because she was “sorta the essential character.” Porter paused before confessing, “I just don’t need to sound like a douche.”
Being the show’s narrator a.k.a. the voice over who guides each episode, she had the ability to up her salary.
“I’d negotiate my narration fee to be huge,” Porter told host Jason Tartick. “I got something like $120,000 for narration. That will be about I feel total five hours of labor. That was what we’d do.”

Siesta Key premiered in 2017 and starred Porter, Madisson Hausburg, Kelsey Owens, Garrett Miller, Amanda Marie Mizell, Alex Kompothecras, Chloe Trautman and Brandon Gomes.
Once the series ended, Porter spread her wings and branched out on her own. She now cohosts her own podcast and is a swimwear designer.
“The rationale I feel the show ended is I do think loads of things had modified,” Porter said on a March episode of her “Don’t Be Ridiculous” podcast. “These are my friends from highschool through early, early 20s. I don’t really discuss with them anymore. It’s a unique era.”
She confessed, “Things were dying. I used to be able to grow. I knew I used to be going to remain in Miami. They didn’t necessarily belong in Miami.” (The fifth and final season filmed in Miami.)