McCurdy, who was 15 when the teenage sitcom was released on Nickelodeon in 2007, has opened up about her abusive childhood in a scathing memoir titled I'm Glad ...
She went on to co-star with Ariana Grande in the spin-off series Sam and Cat. Start your Independent Premium subscription today. The one narrative of my life was ‘Mommy knows best.’”
Jennette McCurdy appeared next to Ariana Grande in Nickelodeon's Sam & Cat. In her new book, I'm Glad My Mom Died, the actress opens up about working with ...
Instead, the 30-year-old actress was meant to take the lead in a show playing the same character (Sam Puckett), but with a storyline that held more substance. And after finding out that Ari was granted a week off from filming to attend an award show, McCurdy revealed how it made her feel. she wrote in her book.
The former Nickelodeon star has revealed how she felt about her former co-star Ariana Grande during the production of Sam & Cat.
She writes: “This was supposed to be Just Puckett, the harrowing tale of a brassy juvenile delinquent-turned-school counsellor. During this time Grande’s pop career took off and she released a string of hits. She goes on to say that initially Grande missed the occasional day on set but she was then told that her co-star would miss a whole week of filming.
In her memoir titled "I'm Glad My Mom Died," McCurdy recalled a man referred to as "The Creator" making her even more nervous while filming.
I want my first kiss to be a real first kiss, not a kiss for a TV show." "You try to just go with it, and if you're Nathan, my costar, it seems like you can," she wrote. "'That was not ideal but FINE, we'll move on. "Our lips touch. Finally, he speaks." In her memoir, McCurdy said that the scene marked her first kiss, both on screen and in real life. Because of her lack of experience, McCurdy found filming to be nerve-racking. "My mind is saying who cares that this is your first kiss, that your first kiss is on-camera. "Our lips are touching," McCurdy recalled. I can smell his hair gel." "He's moving his mouth around a bit, but I can't move mine. The moment happened after both of them revealed that they hadn't kissed anyone before and decided to get it over with.
In her new memoir, the television star opens up about her harrowing upbringing, life as a Disney star, and how, after the death of her mother, ...
For example, any time I would be like, “I need to do something for self-care,” I’d do the thing that everybody does, and I’d Google “self-care tips.” And it’s always like, “Draw a bubble bath. I remember my eating-disorder therapist at the time said how difficult it is to maintain recovery, and I have maintained recovery. And that’s kind of the way that I’m trying to find peace with it now is to try and appreciate what it did for other people and the value that it brought to their lives. I need to feel that my identity as me, as who I am authentically, and not as a vessel for my mom’s needs or a vessel for my character’s needs or a vessel for this network’s needs. I think even walking in a therapist’s office would have been impossible because the second she found out that I was in therapy, I believe she would have found a way to put an end to that and to make sure that that didn’t continue because she would have been terrified of “What are you saying about me?” and “How dare you!” It would have just been more chaos and more of that drama. JM: I love the topic of self-care because I think it’s so nuanced, and I think it’s so often not really explored with much nuance. SN: I’d like to touch on mental health a little bit, and with everything you described in the book, I know this is super-important to you as well. That is not unintentional, but I also think that it’s a title that I hoped to earn in the writing, and I hope that anyone who reads it feels that I did earn it. So, I wanted to keep it as grounded and as rooted in the moment, and in my mentality of the moment, as possible. SN: Having read the book, it’s clear that your past work is tough for you to think about. I believe that I would have recognized the abuse. His name is Sean Manning, and he was so supportive of the voice of the book, the tone of the book, the title of the book, and the cover of the book.
So I have to turn down movies while Ariana's off whistle-toning at the Billboard Music Awards? Fuck. This.”
- The K-Fed tell-all will no longer air in full as it’s “too hurtful,” according to the journalist who secured the exclusive. “Ariana came whistle-toning in with excitement because she had spent the previous evening playing charades at Tom Hanks’s house,” McCurdy recalls. McCurdy writes that she was raised in what she deems “Garbage Grove” with an abusive mother who tirelessly sought fame by any means necessary, yet couldn’t afford rent and utility bills. “The week where I was told Ariana would not be here at all, and that they would write around her absence this episode by having her character be locked in a box. “So I have to turn down movies while Ariana’s off whistle-toning at the Billboard Music Awards? Fuck. This.” Ope! “If I wasn’t such a good sport to begin with, I wouldn’t be in this predicament in the first place.
Jennette McCurdy, who writes that she experienced abuse from her late mom, Debra, stands by her decision to name her memoir “I'm Glad My Mom Died.”
“But now that I have it, I realize that she’s happy and I’m not. I wanted her to be happy,” she wrote. “I usually just try and think of Disneyland when Mom’s doing the exams… McCurdy alleged that when a doctor expressed that she may have had anorexia, her mom denied knowing about any food habits. “I felt like she didn’t deserve my tears and my sadness since she was abusive, but it simplified in a really relieving way and now feels like I’m able to just miss her. We’re keeping me on a 1,000-calorie diet, but I have the smart idea that if I only eat half my food, I’ll only be receiving half the calories, which means that I will be shrinking twice as fast,” McCurdy wrote in her tome ( via ET).
Of course, Jennette came to fame playing Sam Puckett on iCarly, appearing on all six seasons plus a spinoff series. But when it came time for a reboot, she ...
There might be a way for me to act from a place that feels really healing and empowered, maybe write something for myself.'" "I am shocked to be saying — have you ever had one of those thoughts where it’s like, 'Oh where did that come from? Two seasons of the iCarly reboot later, it doesn't seem that Jennette has changed her mind about returning to the show.
Jennette McCurdy opens up to Teen Vogue in an interview about grief, her mom's abuse, and her friendships with Ariana Grande and Miranda Cosgrove.
After undergoing six years of therapy to unpack the impact that her late mother has had on her life, McCurdy, now 30, is ready to tell her story on her own terms. Born and raised in Southern California in a poor, Mormon family, Jennette McCurdy was just six years old when Debra, who had dreamed of becoming an actor herself, projected her own unrealized aspirations onto her only daughter. “I feel strongly that anybody who has experienced abuse from a parental figure will know what I’m talking about.”
Nickelodeon is offering me three hundred thousand dollars in hush money to not talk publicly about my experience on the show?" the actor writes in her new ...
“My body is saying no, I don't want this,” she details. She continues: “My shoulders do have a lot of knots in them, but I don’t want The Creator to be the one rubbing them out. Unflinching. My body is rejecting my mind,” she writes. Jennette claims that her former boss, whom she doesn’t name, got in trouble with the network for “accusations of his emotional abuse.” Moreover, Jennette recalls feeling uneasy when “The Creator” once gave her a shoulder massage without asking her. So much so, in fact, that when Jennette — unhappily — landed her huge role on Nickelodeon’s iCarly at the age of 15, Debra was thrilled.
I get that it's attention-grabbing, but it's also something that I mean sincerely,” McCurdy said this week in an interview.
McCurdy alleges she was “ photographed in a bikini at a wardrobe fitting” and was “encouraged to drink alcohol by an intimidating figure.” In the book, which was released 9 August, McCurdy details the emotional and physical abuse she suffered at the hands of her mother, Debra. She writes that her mother “ explicitly told her how to engage in disordered eating” so that she could “delay puberty” and continue booking child roles. Start your Independent Premium subscription today. And I’m not so concerned with the opinions of anybody else because this book is not for them." “You can’t imagine that people around you are having much harder struggles.” But she argues that those who have experienced parental abuse will appreciate it.
Centered around the abuse McCurdy suffered from her mother, and the treatment of child stars at Nickelodeon, the actress' new book soars to the top of the ...
At Nickelodeon, “The Creator” (who is likely iCarly’s creator and producer, Dan Schneider) pressured McCurdy to wear bikinis, drink alcohol before she was of legal drinking age, and massaged her without consent. “So I have to turn down movies while Ariana’s off whistle-toning at the Billboard Music Awards? Fuck. This,” writes McCurdy. Jennette McCurdy’s new memoir is a barrage of bombshells, beginning with its title: I’m Glad My Mom Died. And people are taking notice, as the book soared to #4 on Amazon’s best-seller charts (and #2 in memoirs), before the physical copy sold out on Amazon altogether.
Jennette McCurdy spoke about feeling jealous of Ariana Grande when she compares their careers since their days on 'Sam & Cat', diving into their ...
Are you kidding me," Jennette continued. And I’m p****d at her. I’m p****d about it.
Jennette McCurdy rose to fame in 2007 in Nickelodeon's iCarly, playing the role of Carly's rebellious best friend, Sam Puckett.
Then, when she got her first period, she began to return to her disordered ways, while her mother continued to insult her body shape and weight. On the advice of her mom, McCurdy said she began restricting her calorie intake to prevent her breasts from getting bigger. Soon after her mom's death, she went out for dinner with friends where she ate a full meal and drank a whole bottle of sake. Elsewhere in a memoir, McCurdy spoke fondly of her close friendship with Cosgrove. As a result, McCurdy stated she had to work around Grande's schedule and missed out on other work, while Grande was able to miss a whole week of filming to attend an awards ceremony. Every time something exciting happens to her, I feel like she robbed me of having that experience myself." She is also working on some other film & TV projects which have not yet been announced." I would choose to never do anything like it again." She then went on to star alongside future Grammy-winner Ariana Grande in the spin-off Sam & Cat in 2013. She insisted that was not the case. Jealous of her," she continued. I wouldn't be on the s**tty show saying these s**tty lines on this s**tty set with this s**tty hairstyle," she added.
Grande's pop star career started taking off during the filming of the show, which only ran for a single season on Nickelodeon. McCurdy writes that she grew to ...
“That was the moment I broke,” McCurdy writes. “I’m Glad My Mom Died” is now available for purchase and has already topped the Amazon bestseller list. McCurdy adds that from that moment on “I didn’t like her. McCurdy continues, “Ariana is at the stage in her career where she’s popping up on every 30 Under 30 list that exists. “So I have to turn down movies while Ariana’s off whistle-toning at the Billboard Music Awards? Fuck. This.” “The week where I was told Ariana would not be here at all, and that they would write around her absence this episode by having her character be locked in a box.
Jennette McCurdy says she was "jealous of" her Sam & Cat co-star Ariana Grande.
I think she'll relate to a lot." I think she'll laugh a lot. I couldn’t like her. I didn’t like her. Ariana grew up in Boca Raton, Florida, an incredibly wealthy, idyllic town, with a healthy mom who could buy her whatever she wanted." Jennette also states that Nickelodeon offered her $300,000 to keep quiet about her negative experiences.
Nickelodeon star Jennette McCurdy discusses her controversial relationship with co-star Ariana Grande and Tom Hanks even came up.
In fact, the star revealed the true feelings she had about her Sam and Cat co-star Ariana Grande during the filming of the show. While filming Sam and Cat, Ariana Grande was becoming an increasingly famous pop star. Former Nickelodeon star Jennette McCurdy has been opening up about myriad topics in recent weeks as part of press for her memoir I’m Glad My Mom Died, but the latest may be a doozy for Nickelodeon fans.
'I'm Glad My Mom Died' includes claims of exploitation, anorexia, co-star feuds, and more.
Jennette McCurdy has released a new memoir, I'm Glad My Mom Died. See how well the writer has done following the launch of her new book.
The book is also credited as a bestseller on the website. Twitter has also been buzzing with praise for the writer. Jennette McCurdy, best known for her role in the hit show, ICarly, released her explosive new book.
I get that it's attention-grabbing, but it's also something that I mean sincerely,” McCurdy said this week in an interview.
McCurdy alleges she was “ photographed in a bikini at a wardrobe fitting” and was “encouraged to drink alcohol by an intimidating figure.” In the book, which was released 9 August, McCurdy details the emotional and physical abuse she suffered at the hands of her mother, Debra. She writes that her mother “ explicitly told her how to engage in disordered eating” so that she could “delay puberty” and continue booking child roles. Start your Independent Premium subscription today. And I’m not so concerned with the opinions of anybody else because this book is not for them." “You can’t imagine that people around you are having much harder struggles.” But she argues that those who have experienced parental abuse will appreciate it.
Ahead of the release of her memoir, "I'm Glad My Mom Died," McCurdy reflected on her yearslong friendship with Cosgrove, with whom she starred on the ...
Cosgrove tried to convince McCurdy to join her in the "iCarly" reboot "With Miranda, it's always been so easy," she writes. I just love her so much."