iCarly star Jennette McCurdy has opened up about her abusive relationship with her mom since the release of her new book.
TW: Abuse.
And now, a shocking allegation has come to light.
Nickelodeon offered McCurdy a hefty sum to keep her story quiet.
As you might already be aware, Jennette McCurdy has had an incredibly difficult upbringing, and she has recently spilled all in her book I’m Glad My Mom Died.
But one particular revelation has left the internet in total shock.
Scroll on to see for yourself…
Now, Jennette McCurdy is most well known for her role as the boisterous Sam Puckett in iCarly.
It was undoubtedly her first big breakthrough, after starting out her acting career at 8 years old on Mad TV.
By the age of fourteen, she had already starred in a whole host of tv shows, such as CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, Malcolm in the Middle, Lincoln Heights, Will & Grace, and Zoey 101, just to name a few.
But it was her performance as Sam Puckett in the Nickelodeon TV series iCarly that really thrust her into the spotlight.
In 2008, she was nominated for a Young Artist Award for her work on the show…
And was later nominated for a 2009 Teen Choice Award in the Favorite TV Sidekick category for her role.
Despite all her accolades, it was never really McCurdy’s dream to become an actress.
In fact, she has revealed that she only carried on in the entertainment industry to satisfy her “controlling” mom.
The actress has publicly revealed that she suffered a lot of abuse at the hands of her mom, sharing her story in an interview with People magazine…
She said: “My mom’s emotions were so erratic that it was like walking a tightrope every day.”
According to McCurdy, her mom forced her into acting when she was 6 to help support her family, and because she wanted to be an actress herself.
She shared that her mom was “obsessed with making [her] a star.”
Things only got worse for McCurdy when she won the role of Sam in iCarly.
McCurdy has gone into detail about the goings on in her recent memoir, I’m Glad My Mom Died.
In her book, she shares devastating moments in her life where her mom forced her to carry on in the acting industry as a teen, despite her not wanting to.
As well as the abuse she went through as a teen on set.
She revealed that when she got the call back for iCarly aged fourteen…
“I jump into Mom’s arms. She squeezes me. I’m elated. Everything’s going to be different now. Everything’s going to be better. Mom will finally be happy. Her dream has come true.”
Little did she know, that was only the start of years of abuse at the hands of those she worked for.
According to the New York Times, McCurdy wrote that one of the most unsettling moments she can remember was the time she was photographed wearing a bikini during a fitting, sharing that someone she calls “the Creator” offered her alcohol.
And after confiding in her mom about the situation, she brushed it off…
Allegedly telling her: “Everyone wants what you have,” and that it’s just something that happens in Hollywood.
After her time on iCarly came to an end, she was offered the same role in Sam & Cat, alongside Ariana Grande.
And it was during this time she started noticing double standards between her and her co-stars. Particularly, she wasn’t allowed the same freedom to audition for other roles as those she worked with.
“What finally undid me was when Ariana came whistle-toning in with excitement because she had spent the previous evening playing charades at Tom Hanks’s house.
“That was the moment I broke,” she recalled.
“My whole childhood and adolescence were very exploited,” she told the New York Times.
“It still gives my nervous system a reaction to say it. There were cases where people had the best intentions and maybe didn’t know what they were doing. And also cases where they did — they knew exactly what they were doing.”
Finally, after Sam & Cat came to an end after just 1 season, McCurdy admitted she was offered, what she calls, “hush money.”
According to Vanity Fair, McCurdy claimed that after the show was canceled, she was informed that Nickelodeon was “offering [her] $300,000” and to “think of it like a thank-you gift.”
She said that one of her team members told her: “They’re giving you $300,000 and the only thing they want you to do is never talk publicly about your experience at Nickelodeon.”
After being told it was free money, McCurdy told her agent: “No it’s not. This isn’t free money. This feels to me like hush money… I’m not taking hush money.”
“What the f***? Nickelodeon is offering me $300,000 in hush money to not talk publicly about my experience on the show? My personal experience of The Creator’s abuse?” she wrote.
“This is a network with shows made for children. Shouldn’t they have some sort of moral compass? Shouldn’t they at least try to report to some sort of ethical standard?
“I lean back against the headboard of my bed and cross my legs out in front of me. I extend my arms behind my head and rest them there in a gesture of pride. Who else would have the moral strength? I just turned down $300,000.”
She wrote her book not long after her mother Debbie, died after losing a battle with breast cancer in 2013.
Recently, McCurdy appeared on the Red Table Talk with Jada and Willow Smith, where she read out a particularly disturbing section of her book.
And the contents left them in total shock.
In the book, she details “decades of torment, exploitation, and manipulation inflicted by her very own mother” after “years of suffering in silence.”
In a teaser for the episode, she could be seen reading out a snippet of her book to hosts Jada, Willow, and Adrienne Banfield.
The small section she read out was about an email her mom had sent her about seeing pictures of her with an ex-boyfriend 10 years ago.
Her mom wrote: “I am so disappointed in you. You used to be my perfect little angel, but now you are nothing more than a little’ — all caps — ‘sl*t, a floozy, all used up,'” McCurdy read as the hosts looked at her in shock.”
“‘And to think you wasted it on that hideous ogre of a man. I saw the pictures on a website called TMZ. I saw you rubbing his disgusting hairy stomach. I knew you were lying about Colton.’ (I had told her I was with a friend, Colton.) Add that to a list of things you are: liar, conniving, evil.”
“‘You look pudgier too. It’s clear you’re eating your guilt,'” Jennette continued. “‘Thinking of you with his ding-dong inside of you makes me sick. Sick! I raised you better than this. What happened to my good little girl? Where did she go and who is this monster that has replaced her?
“You’re an ugly monster now,” the email went on. “I told your brothers about you and they all said they disown you just like I do. We want nothing to do with you. Love, Mom — or should I say Deb since I am no longer your mother? P.S. Send money for a new fridge; ours broke.'”
“The P.S. gets me,” McCurdy chuckled, while Willow simply responded: “Wow!”
And now, more shock revelations from the book have gone viral.
“So she showered me until I was 17-18,” McCurdy told Louis Theroux on his podcast.
“So be in the shower with me shampooing and conditioning, my hair washing my body.”
“She would give me breast and vaginal exams in the shower and said that she was checking for lumps, just checking for cancer.”
“She would be clothed, but it was uncomfortable for me. I knew it felt violating for me. And I knew I didn’t want it, but the one time I had attempted to even say, ‘Hey, do you think I could shower myself?'”
“She flew into hysterics and it just became clear to me. ‘Oh, I can’t ever try to shower myself again.’ So, literally, the only thing that got her to stop showering me was that she was re-diagnosed with cancer when I was 18, and she had to have rounds of chemotherapy and radiation.”
“And I had to go on a music tour, she physically could not be with me and I think that’s the only reason why I was able to start showering myself.”
McCurdy also shared a shocking allegation against Nickelodeon.
“I will say the environment I was in for making children’s television shows was undeniably toxic and aspects of it were undeniably abusive. And I don’t think I realized it because those were the environments where I spent most of my time,” she shared.
“I knew that sets beforehand had felt somewhat different […] there’d been a different vibe, but I’d certainly been on tense set environments before, but it was just by far the most intense, the most extreme.”
She also claimed she refused $300,000 from Nickelodeon in exchange for keeping her story quiet.
“The way I see it now is like I think it was just moral righteousness. And then sort of almost instantly after saying though I’m not taking the money, I felt like that’s a lot of money,” she reflects.
You can listen to the full interview on Spotify here.
What do you think of McCurdy’s update?