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  • That show, continue, I say it all the time, it continues to be funny.

  • It's a great show.

  • >> Thank you so much.

  • >> It is, and

  • you're the smart one on it too, which must be fun to play the smart one.

  • >> It is really fun, I love my character.

  • >> Yeah. >> You know, I think it's really important

  • to have young girls see that it's cool to be smart as well.

  • You can still have friends, be cool, do all that stuff.

  • >> You're actually the coolest one on there,

  • because you're the smartest one on there.

  • >> Thank you. >> You haven't been on here since,

  • how old are you now?

  • >> I'm 18.

  • >> You were 13 the last time you were here.

  • >> Yeah.

  • >> And you have been through a lot.

  • There's a lot going on with you and your life at this young age.

  • So you were emancipated from your mother, right?

  • >> Mm-hm. >> Explain what people

  • don't know what that is, what does that mean?

  • >> Well emancipation is basically, you become your own entity,

  • nobody controls you anymore.

  • You handle your own business affairs, your own living arrangements, your own money.

  • Everything is sort of in your hands.

  • >> At 15 you did this?

  • >> Well, actually from 14 to 17 it was a legal custody battle.

  • My sister was granted temporary custody first.

  • And then when I was 17 in the beginning of the year she was granted

  • permanent custody.

  • And then to kind of just move forward with the process and end it altogether,

  • we got me emancipated.

  • >> Yeah. >> So I could just handle my own affairs.

  • >> So your sister has been really there for you and great for you, right?

  • >> She's been the best part of my life.

  • She really is my best friend.

  • She is the most important thing to me.

  • She's been there for me through absolutely everything and I I just love her so much.

  • I count on her more than anything.

  • >> Does she have a relationship with your mother?

  • >> Neither of us do.

  • >> Neither of you do. Okay so and

  • I think a lot of people that don't understand because nobody really knows

  • anybody's personal family business, why you would do that.

  • Obviously there's a reason you would not want to be connected to her,

  • and what is that reason?

  • >> Well, it's most definitely hard to grow up in the industry, but

  • just grow up in any instance without a mother from a very young age.

  • And it has been very sad for me, but at the same time it's been much better for

  • me emotionally and physically to be on my own and

  • have a better, safer household and support system.

  • I don't really talk about the reason that I I don't speak to my mother,

  • it's kinda been publicized.

  • But the reason I don't really share that is because I

  • want to give her the same respect that she didn't give to me publicly.

  • >> Yeah, she went on Dr.

  • Phil to try to show her side of the story which is, that to me is enough.

  • >> Well, it just really didn't try and fix anything with me,

  • it just tried to make herself look better, and I'm not interested in doing that.

  • People can make their own judgments, I did what I had to do for myself.

  • >> And so you're 18 years old.

  • [APPLAUSE] >> And

  • you are, tell me if this is wrong, you love the show, you love doing what you do.

  • >> I do. >> But

  • from a young, young age this was not your choice.

  • It was kind of not your choice to go into this business, you were kind of pushed and

  • forced into this business.

  • >> Well my mother put me in the industry when I was four years old.

  • And I think when you're four years old you don't really know anything that you want

  • to do, you want to be everything.

  • Not to say that this isn't my passion and I don't love it.

  • I do love it and I would love to continue doing it for the rest of my life.

  • >> Right. >> But

  • I also love to explore other avenues.

  • I wanted to go to college since I was very young, I've worked very hard.

  • I go to real high school, and I do my best to move forward in my future that way.

  • I would love to be a lawyer and I've applied for college, and

  • I'm going through that process right now.

  • >> Good for you, you go to real high school right now?

  • >> Yes.

  • >> And obviously they know who you are?

  • >> Mm-hm.

  • >> And they must be so excited >> Well

  • actually they're really wonderful because no one really cares.

  • [LAUGH] I know that seems weird but nobody really does, everyone's been really good

  • to me they just treat me normally which is what I love.

  • I've met some amazing friends and it's just been an amazing experience for

  • me thus far.

  • >> Good for you, I mean you're so, it's hard enough to grow up at that age,

  • you're going through so much anyway, much less what you've gone through.

  • And then on top of it you got bullied because you got a breast reduction,

  • which is a decision that obviously that was important to you.

  • >> Yeah. >> You get bullied for

  • body image then you get bullied because your scars were showing.

  • I mean, how do you let everything just roll off your back?

  • It's definitely been a process, and I don't say now that I am totally over it.

  • I think criticism always hits people, regardless of how old they are,

  • how far they've come.

  • It definitely, you know we all have insecurities.

  • And I'm not gonna say that I'm totally above it and it doesn't hurt me, it does.

  • But I've learned a little bit to be able to brush it off.

  • I've been dealing with criticism since I was 12 years old.

  • And I first started developing, which was already very hard to grow up in front of

  • the public and also have your body changing.

  • And then dangle through a surgery which I decided to make public because I thought

  • it was very important to talk to women about it in general, because I know

  • there are so many people who have been in my position that needed the surgery.

  • And I thought it was important to talk about it.

  • And although I got backlash from that, and criticism and

  • everything, at the end of the day it was what I needed to do.

  • The people who supported me are the people that matter in my life.

  • And that's what I just kind of had to train myself to remember, is that

  • the people that love me and support me are what mattered, their opinions matter.

  • >> [APPLAUSE] >> I support you.

  • >> Thank you.

That show, continue, I say it all the time, it continues to be funny.

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