The actress how bullying has been replacing over time and reflects on this interview with Jenny McCarthy.
With more than 20 years of delight in the business, Tara Reid has had her moments as a Hollywood punch ball, taking hits from the public, the media and even her standout counterparts.
Prior to his appearance in Hollywood Disclosure with Serena DC, where he communicated about the intensity intimidation, Reid shared some of his delight with TooFab.
Halfway through, Reid, a member of Hollywood It Girls, holds the headlines alongside young women such as Lindsay Lohan, Paris Hilton, Mischa Barton, Britney Spears and the girls from “The Hills.”
“There’s not as much cyberbullying, it’s much more private,” Reid said of the days before celebrity news grew in the 2000s.
As celebrity news sites began reporting on nighttime sightings at clubs such as Hyde and Les Deux, crazy star nights made headlines and those reading them.
“In this country, they don’t let you have fun. If you’re having fun, you’re a bad girl,” Reid said. “If you pass out and dance, you’re a bad girl. A boy comes out and dances. ‘Oh, he’s a rock star.’ Total standard double.”
“When I’m not working, I can pass out and laugh,” said the actress, who noted that it had softened over the years. “It’s not fair that I have to stay home at my house, because if I pass out and laugh with my friends, ‘she’s crazy.'”
Now, by 2020, hate is even closer to home, as trolls can now flood star comments on Instagram and Twitter with their poisonous thoughts. Reid admits it takes a lot to get to that now, saying comments like “Eat a cheeseburger,” but that doesn’t excuse this kind of behavior.
“Cyberbullying happens, with weight, if you’re gay, lesbianArray … so much racism, it just has to end,” Reid said. “It has to be much more controlled. Social media is a very harmful thing.”
“With all the riots and everything that’s going on right now, we want to come together and keep us from getting killed and avoid writing horrible things about others and being one,” he continued. “America is fighting for others … they like to build you and then destroy you.”
“There are times in my career when I’ve been the biggest and helped other celebrities get their roles in other movies, without naming names, but suddenly they got bigger and you were a little shattered. they looked at you as [mocking], ” said Reid. “I’m like, ‘Are you kidding me? I got you.’ It’s unhappy for me, it’s personal, it’s another. Everything else I can handle.”
Although he didn’t call the calls, we asked him about a viral interview he did with Jenny McCarthy in 2016, one that ended up with Tara and Amy Schumer expressing for Reid while calling McCarthy a thug.
While Reid was at McCarthy’s exhibition to announce the most recent film “Sharknado” at the time, Jenny continued to ask questions about “Wedding Boot Camp” and plastic surgery. When Tara tried to finish the interview earlier, Jenny said, “Good luck to you too, and I’m very excited about ‘Sharknado’ and I hope you’re still married.”
“I hope you’re still married too, ” replied Tara. “I hope your breasts look even more beautiful, because they are amazing. The same guy who made mine, right? I’m going to use your advice. You are the best. Goodbye.”
“I hate it because it was actually irrelevant,” Reid said as we discussed how the audio of his debatable moment circulates regularly on Twitter.
Despite everything, Reid kept an idea in mind: “What doesn’t kill makes you stronger.”
He said his pleasure in bullying through his peers taught him who he wanted to stay close to. “I want to have other smart people around me, period, who care about me and possibly wouldn’t let him hurt me,” he added. “If you see something like that, you spit on me. I haven’t had that in so long and it’s great to have that.”
“I’m not a girl anymore,” she added. “All those other people think, ‘Oh, she’s wild, she’s like that,’ who wasn’t in her twenties? I don’t do what I did guys, it’s not the same!”
Reid’s interview in Hollywood Disclosure with Serena DC will air Sunday at 10 a.m. on the FYI network.