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I was on Toddlers and Tiara's as a pageant girl, folk can't believe where I am now after branding me the ‘baddest child'
I was on Toddlers and Tiara's as a pageant girl, folk can't believe where I am now after branding me the ‘baddest child'

Scottish Sun

time06-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Scottish Sun

I was on Toddlers and Tiara's as a pageant girl, folk can't believe where I am now after branding me the ‘baddest child'

Read on to see where MaKenzie is now ALL GROWN UP I was on Toddlers and Tiara's as a pageant girl, folk can't believe where I am now after branding me the 'baddest child' Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) A YOUNG woman who appeared on the hit TV show Toddlers and Tiaras has hit back at those who called her the naughtiest child. MaKenzie Myers, now 20, first appeared on the show at four years old, and her sassy behavior and toddler tantrums made her an instant star. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 3 MaKenzie Myers hit back at those who called her a bad kid Credit: Tiktok/@makenziebellemyers 3 She appeared on the TLC show Toddlers and Tiaras and became a fan favourite Credit: youtube/@TLCTVUK 3 Her cheeky tantrums had people in stitches Credit: youtube/@TLCTVUK The young pageant competitor often appeared with her mum, Juana, who attempted to get the tot dressed and ready for shows. But in the series, it was clear MaKenzie wasn't always on board with her mum's style choices. In one infamous clip, MaKenzie's mum is attempting to get her costume changed for competition day and is trying to put a belt around her waist. But MaKenzie was having none of it, saying: 'Oh no, I can't do that. I'm not doing that. I'm sorry.' When her mum is heard trying to negotiate with her, she says, 'Oh my gosh. Leave me alone, people.' In other clips from the TLC show, MaKenzie can be seen being treated to a pedicure with some apple juice in a champagne glass. Despite the show being filmed over ten years ago, MaKenzie's toddler tantrums are still remembered and she recently took to TikTok to share her thoughts on the matter. Using the audio from her outfit tantrum, she wrote over the clip: 'My exact reaction to waking up this morning to be tagged one million and one times in a comment section where everyone is talking about how bad a child I was. "God forbid a girl have an opinion on what she wears at a young age.' Now, the 20-year-old has seemingly ditched the glamorous life of pageantry and is now a student at Louisiana Christian University and plays on the softball team. Outrage Over Mum's Decision to Gift Smartphone to Toddler The video posted to her TikTok account @makenziebellemyers has since gone viral with over 4 million views and 338k likes. People in the comments were quick to share their thoughts, with many saying MaKenzie wasn't to blame. One person wrote: "I fear you actually communicated your feelings very well before the meltdown but no one listened to you." Another commented: "You really were an absolute menace and I love it." "God forbid a toddler act like a toddler," penned a third. Tips for Dealing with Toddlers IF you're struggling to control your toddler, here's ten tips that you need to know... Stay Calm and Patient Take deep breaths and maintain a calm demeanor. Patience is key; toddlers are still learning to navigate their emotions and behaviors. Set Clear Boundaries Establish consistent rules and explain them in simple terms. Be firm but gentle in enforcing boundaries. Offer Choices Give your toddler options to foster independence. For example, let them choose between two outfits or snacks. Use Positive Reinforcement Praise good behavior and offer small rewards. Acknowledge their efforts and achievements to encourage repetition of positive actions. Create a Routine Structure and predictability help toddlers feel secure. Maintain regular meal times, nap times, and bedtime routines. Stay Engaged Spend quality time interacting with your toddler. Read, play, and explore activities together to strengthen your bond. Be a Role Model Demonstrate the behavior you expect from your toddler. Use polite language, share, and show empathy in your interactions. Encourage Communication Help your toddler express their feelings with words. Teach them simple phrases to communicate needs and emotions. Redirect Attention When faced with undesirable behavior, distract and redirect their focus. Introduce a new activity or toy to shift attention away from the issue. Ensure Safety Child-proof your home to prevent accidents. Supervise your toddler closely to keep them safe while exploring. Meanwhile a fourth said: "Your episodes were my favorite on Toddlers and Tiaras." "My girl, you were EVERYTHING. I still quote 'we're going to diva day!!!!!' CONSTANTLY,' claimed a fifth Someone else added: "YOU were not the issue with Toddlers and Tiaras."

I was on Toddlers and Tiara's as a pageant girl, folk can't believe where I am now after branding me the ‘baddest child'
I was on Toddlers and Tiara's as a pageant girl, folk can't believe where I am now after branding me the ‘baddest child'

The Irish Sun

time06-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Irish Sun

I was on Toddlers and Tiara's as a pageant girl, folk can't believe where I am now after branding me the ‘baddest child'

A YOUNG woman who appeared on the hit TV show Toddlers and Tiaras has hit back at those who called her the naughtiest child. MaKenzie Myers, now 20, first appeared on the show at four years old, and her sassy behavior and toddler tantrums made her an instant star. 3 MaKenzie Myers hit back at those who called her a bad kid Credit: Tiktok/@makenziebellemyers 3 She appeared on the TLC show Toddlers and Tiaras and became a fan favourite Credit: youtube/@TLCTVUK 3 Her cheeky tantrums had people in stitches Credit: youtube/@TLCTVUK The But in the In one infamous clip, MaKenzie's mum is attempting to get her costume changed for competition day and is trying to put a belt around her waist. But MaKenzie was having none of it, saying: 'Oh no, I can't do that. I'm not doing that. I'm sorry.' READ MORE REAL LIFE STORIES When her mum is heard trying to negotiate with her, she says, 'Oh my gosh. Leave me alone, people.' In other clips from the TLC show, MaKenzie can be seen being treated to a pedicure with some apple juice in a champagne glass. Despite the show being filmed over ten years ago, MaKenzie's toddler tantrums are still remembered and she recently took to TikTok to share her thoughts on the matter. Using the audio from her outfit tantrum, she wrote over the clip: 'My exact reaction to waking up this morning to be tagged one million and one times in a comment section where everyone is talking about how bad a child I was. Most read in Fabulous "God forbid a girl have an opinion on what she wears at a young age.' Now, the 20-year-old has seemingly ditched the glamorous life of pageantry and is now a student at Louisiana Christian University and plays on the softball team. Outrage Over Mum's Decision to Gift Smartphone to Toddler The video posted to her TikTok account @ People in the comments were quick to share their thoughts, with many saying MaKenzie wasn't to blame. One person wrote: "I fear you actually communicated your feelings very well before the meltdown but no one listened to you." Another commented: "You really were an absolute menace and I love it." "God forbid a toddler act like a toddler," penned a third. Tips for Dealing with Toddlers IF you're struggling to control your toddler, here's ten tips that you need to know... Stay Calm and Patient Take deep breaths and maintain a calm demeanor. Patience is key; toddlers are still learning to navigate their emotions and behaviors. Set Clear Boundaries Establish consistent rules and explain them in simple terms. Be firm but gentle in enforcing boundaries. Offer Choices Give your toddler options to foster independence. For example, let them choose between two outfits or snacks. Use Positive Reinforcement Praise good behavior and offer small rewards. Acknowledge their efforts and achievements to encourage repetition of positive actions. Create a Routine Structure and predictability help toddlers feel secure. Maintain regular meal times, nap times, and bedtime routines. Stay Engaged Spend quality time interacting with your toddler. Read, play, and explore activities together to strengthen your bond. Be a Role Model Demonstrate the behavior you expect from your toddler. Use polite language, share, and show empathy in your interactions. Encourage Communication Help your toddler express their feelings with words. Teach them simple phrases to communicate needs and emotions. Redirect Attention When faced with undesirable behavior, distract and redirect their focus. Introduce a new activity or toy to shift attention away from the issue. Ensure Safety Child-proof your home to prevent accidents. Supervise your toddler closely to keep them safe while exploring. Meanwhile a fourth said: "Your episodes were my favorite on Toddlers and Tiaras." "My girl, you were EVERYTHING. I still quote 'we're going to diva day!!!!!' CONSTANTLY,' claimed a fifth Someone else added: "YOU were not the issue with Toddlers and Tiaras."

She was Honey Boo Boo
She was Honey Boo Boo

Yahoo

time24-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

She was Honey Boo Boo

In 2012, TLC filmed a tiny, hyperactive 6-year-old girl with curly blond hair as she flailed about in an interview chair, declaring herself a 'beauty queen' and a 'superstar.' She dissed her fellow child beauty pageant contestants, calling them 'honey boo boo child' and introducing her mother, 'Mama June' Shannon, as the 'Coupon Queen.' Her high energy and penchant for creating viral soundbites in a playful Georgia accent (like 'dollar makes me holler' and 'everybody's a little gay') made her a meme and a reality TV staple for the next decade. But that was Honey Boo Boo, not Alana Thompson. Technically, they're the same person. Thompson will still smile and take a photo with you if you recognize her as her younger alter ego out in public, but she's got an identity of her own now beyond the caricature of a redneck reality star. She's ready to tell her story. 'I decided that now was a good time because I feel like everybody thinks they know my story,' she told Yahoo Entertainment in the same familiar Southern twang of her youth. 'I think it's going to be an eye opener for everybody because everybody thinks they know … me.' The 19-year-old is now studying nursing at Regis University in Denver. When she's featured on the latest iteration of her family's long-running reality show, Mama June: Family Crisis, she's doing her best to separate herself from the chaos of her upbringing. That's what she hopes her new Lifetime biopic, I Was Honey Boo Boo, will help accomplish. In the film, actors re-create scenes from Thompson's past. Those scenes are threaded together with statements from Thompson in the present. Though she talks extensively — and candidly — about her mom and sisters in the film, which first aired in May, she didn't run any of her plans or statements by them beforehand. 'Everything that was said, I just said it. I knew that I wanted to share my story and be the most authentic — I did not want to lie about anything, so I literally told them that I'm filming a documentary series,' Thompson explained to Yahoo Entertainment. 'Just know that nothing is left untold.' Nearly every child star who maintains an audience into adulthood has to reckon with the same thing: How do I confront my past but continue forging a present that's both satisfying and separate from what made me famous? For Thompson, the solution is simple. She's just going to keep telling the truth. That starts with the reality of the emotional abuse that she endured both onscreen and off. Thompson wasn't just a child star — she was 'mama's little moneymaker,' per a reenactment in her movie, within a family constantly rocked by scandal. In I Was Honey Boo Boo, present day Thompson says, 'It was always the same thing. I wanted Mama, but her love was only transactional.' After Thompson was crowned queen of the Toddlers and Tiaras universe, she got her own show: Here Comes Honey Boo Boo, which ran for two seasons. It was technically canceled in 2014, when Shannon was caught spending time with a registered sex offender. It was reborn — now with Shannon, whose 300-pound weight loss made headlines, as its title character — on WeTV in 2017 as Mama June: From Not to Hot; then rebranded to Mama June: Road to Redemption in 2021, when Shannon began trying to get sober after an arrest for drug possession; and once again, retitled Mama June: Family Crisis, in 2023. The franchise has been criticized for years for poking fun at its subjects in its portayal of Thompson's family as 'a horde of lice-picking, lard-eating, nose-thumbing hooligans south of the Mason–Dixon line,' 'a car crash' and 'people to point and snicker at.' Despite the way the shows seemed to suggest that the family should be laughed at because of the way they look and talk, they just kept coming back, demanding to be seen. Having cameras around all the time wasn't easy — especially when her family was enduring so many difficulties — but Thompson didn't mind putting on a show. "Growing up in the spotlight, there's things I probably would have did different, but it was hard and it was fun at the same time. I have always loved being the center of attention, and I've always loved making people laugh,' Thompson told Yahoo Entertainment. 'I loved every second of it. There was never a time I was like, 'I don't want to do this.'' Much of I Was Honey Boo Boo's runtime is spent detailing the emotionally abusive relationship between Thompson and her mother. Shannon first appeared as a loving-if-misguided mother figure who nurtured Thompson's love of pageants, yelling 'Work it, Smoochie!' from the audience as Thompson performed and feeding her 'go-go juice' (Mountain Dew and Red Bull) to get her hyped up. She produced just about as many viral quotes as her daughter too. But as time went on, Shannon's substance abuse and relationship conflicts became a serious problem in their home, causing financial and interpersonal strife. At one point, Thompson's sister Lauryn 'Pumpkin' Efird became her legal guardian. By the time she became an adult and left the care of anyone she's related to, Thompson had been the star of three reality shows. 'For me, it's not about fame and it's not about the money,' she says in the biopic. 'Honestly, my story is simple. It's about a mom and a daughter and breaking the cycle of emotional abuse.' But the money still matters — or else it serves as evidence that the relationship between Thompson and her mom has always been fraught. Over and over, Thompson explains in the biopic that her mom would cling to her when she needed money, then let her go when she didn't. Thompson has claimed that she never received any of the money she earned as a child star. She doesn't even know how much she'd be owed, at this point. On Season 6 of Mama June: Family Crisis, Shannon confessed that she'd taken some of the money allotted to Thompson in a Coogan account, a trust in which parents are required to set aside the earnings of their child star children. Shannon paid it back but never apologized. 'I would tell people to take it one day at a time and just know that there is light at the end of the tunnel,' Thompson said. 'Not every day is going to be your worst day, and not every day is going to be your best day, so just take it slow and work with what you got.' She just wishes that she could go back in time and tell herself that. 'To know where I [was] five or six years from now to where I am today is such a big, dramatic change,' she said. 'It makes me more motivated to see what else I can do in the future.' When Thompson looks back at old memes and videos of herself, she feels both sadness and happiness. Being able to rewatch Here Comes Honey Boo Boo feels a lot like watching a home video. But sometimes, those memories sting. 'We used to be so close as a family … we're close again now, but when the cameras really started coming out, we wasn't as close anymore. It's a little sad,' she said. Burdened by bullying and a hectic filming schedule, Thompson left traditional school to be homeschooled when she was young. Years later, her return to public high school is shown as a major turning point in Here Comes Honey Boo Boo. She's exceptionally smart, which wouldn't surprise anyone who considers how many witty and instantly iconic statements she's responsible for, and defies the not-so-bright stereotypes forced upon people with accents like hers. Thompson is fully committed to school right now, focusing as much as she can. She's officially a junior in college and hoping to become a pediatric ICU nurse. 'I just want my adulthood to be, like, me accomplishing my goals,' she said. 'Eventually, in the future, I want to be a mom and stuff. I don't like to go too in detail because I don't even know what's going to probably happen tomorrow!' Thompson still loves performing, though. 'I like turning on the spark and being energetic and being … fun when in the room. I don't like to have a little sad party,' she said. That's a relief to hear, because Thompson's still technically a part of her family's reality show. They've all come together in recent years after losing her sister Anna 'Chickadee' Cardwell to cancer. Thompson said that, in spite of whatever relationship she has with her mom, she's 'very grateful' for Mama June: Family Crisis. 'It's one of the main reasons I'm able to pay for college. I am very grateful for it, but it's a lot, trying to do college and have the show and everything,' she said. On the show, she's Alana now. In her everyday life, most people still call her Honey Boo Boo when they come up to her. It's not as bad as it used to be, though. 'I remember us first coming to Hollywood, and we were bombarded by paparazzi,' she said. 'I probably get [approached] maybe like five or six times a day. When I first got famous, it was like 20 or 30 times a day.' Thompson laughed when she realized that five or six confrontations per day is still quite a lot, but she's never known anything different. People might have their perceptions of her — they always have — but she's focused on who she's becoming. 'Everybody's always gonna have their own opinion on me, regardless of what I say, but I just want people to know that I really am a hard worker. I really am this happy little bubbly girl … I'm so sweet and I'm not as stuck up and all famous-person as people think I am,' Thompson said. 'I just want people to know that this is my truth.'

She was Honey Boo Boo
She was Honey Boo Boo

Yahoo

time24-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

She was Honey Boo Boo

In 2012, TLC filmed a tiny, hyperactive 6-year-old girl with curly blond hair as she flailed about in an interview chair, declaring herself a 'beauty queen' and a 'superstar.' She dissed her fellow child beauty pageant contestants, calling them 'honey boo boo child' and introducing her mother, 'Mama June' Shannon, as the 'Coupon Queen.' Her high energy and penchant for creating viral soundbites in a playful Georgia accent (like 'dollar makes me holler' and 'everybody's a little gay') made her a meme and a reality TV staple for the next decade. But that was Honey Boo Boo, not Alana Thompson. Technically, they're the same person. Thompson will still smile and take a photo with you if you recognize her as her younger alter ego out in public, but she's got an identity of her own now beyond the caricature of a redneck reality star. She's ready to tell her story. 'I decided that now was a good time because I feel like everybody thinks they know my story,' she told Yahoo Entertainment in the same familiar Southern twang of her youth. 'I think it's going to be an eye opener for everybody because everybody thinks they know … me.' The 19-year-old is now studying nursing at Regis University in Denver. When she's featured on the latest iteration of her family's long-running reality show, Mama June: Family Crisis, she's doing her best to separate herself from the chaos of her upbringing. That's what she hopes her new Lifetime biopic, I Was Honey Boo Boo, will help accomplish. In the film, actors re-create scenes from Thompson's past. Those scenes are threaded together with statements from Thompson in the present. Though she talks extensively — and candidly — about her mom and sisters in the film, which first aired in May, she didn't run any of her plans or statements by them beforehand. 'Everything that was said, I just said it. I knew that I wanted to share my story and be the most authentic — I did not want to lie about anything, so I literally told them that I'm filming a documentary series,' Thompson explained to Yahoo Entertainment. 'Just know that nothing is left untold.' Nearly every child star who maintains an audience into adulthood has to reckon with the same thing: How do I confront my past but continue forging a present that's both satisfying and separate from what made me famous? For Thompson, the solution is simple. She's just going to keep telling the truth. That starts with the reality of the emotional abuse that she endured both onscreen and off. Thompson wasn't just a child star — she was 'mama's little moneymaker,' per a reenactment in her movie, within a family constantly rocked by scandal. In I Was Honey Boo Boo, present day Thompson says, 'It was always the same thing. I wanted Mama, but her love was only transactional.' After Thompson was crowned queen of the Toddlers and Tiaras universe, she got her own show: Here Comes Honey Boo Boo, which ran for two seasons. It was technically canceled in 2014, when Shannon was caught spending time with a registered sex offender. It was reborn — now with Shannon, whose 300-pound weight loss made headlines, as its title character — on WeTV in 2017 as Mama June: From Not to Hot; then rebranded to Mama June: Road to Redemption in 2021, when Shannon began trying to get sober after an arrest for drug possession; and once again, retitled Mama June: Family Crisis, in 2023. The franchise has been criticized for years for poking fun at its subjects in its portayal of Thompson's family as 'a horde of lice-picking, lard-eating, nose-thumbing hooligans south of the Mason–Dixon line,' 'a car crash' and 'people to point and snicker at.' Despite the way the shows seemed to suggest that the family should be laughed at because of the way they look and talk, they just kept coming back, demanding to be seen. Having cameras around all the time wasn't easy — especially when her family was enduring so many difficulties — but Thompson didn't mind putting on a show. "Growing up in the spotlight, there's things I probably would have did different, but it was hard and it was fun at the same time. I have always loved being the center of attention, and I've always loved making people laugh,' Thompson told Yahoo Entertainment. 'I loved every second of it. There was never a time I was like, 'I don't want to do this.'' Much of I Was Honey Boo Boo's runtime is spent detailing the emotionally abusive relationship between Thompson and her mother. Shannon first appeared as a loving-if-misguided mother figure who nurtured Thompson's love of pageants, yelling 'Work it, Smoochie!' from the audience as Thompson performed and feeding her 'go-go juice' (Mountain Dew and Red Bull) to get her hyped up. She produced just about as many viral quotes as her daughter too. But as time went on, Shannon's substance abuse and relationship conflicts became a serious problem in their home, causing financial and interpersonal strife. At one point, Thompson's sister Lauryn 'Pumpkin' Efird became her legal guardian. By the time she became an adult and left the care of anyone she's related to, Thompson had been the star of three reality shows. 'For me, it's not about fame and it's not about the money,' she says in the biopic. 'Honestly, my story is simple. It's about a mom and a daughter and breaking the cycle of emotional abuse.' But the money still matters — or else it serves as evidence that the relationship between Thompson and her mom has always been fraught. Over and over, Thompson explains in the biopic that her mom would cling to her when she needed money, then let her go when she didn't. Thompson has claimed that she never received any of the money she earned as a child star. She doesn't even know how much she'd be owed, at this point. On Season 6 of Mama June: Family Crisis, Shannon confessed that she'd taken some of the money allotted to Thompson in a Coogan account, a trust in which parents are required to set aside the earnings of their child star children. Shannon paid it back but never apologized. 'I would tell people to take it one day at a time and just know that there is light at the end of the tunnel,' Thompson said. 'Not every day is going to be your worst day, and not every day is going to be your best day, so just take it slow and work with what you got.' She just wishes that she could go back in time and tell herself that. 'To know where I [was] five or six years from now to where I am today is such a big, dramatic change,' she said. 'It makes me more motivated to see what else I can do in the future.' When Thompson looks back at old memes and videos of herself, she feels both sadness and happiness. Being able to rewatch Here Comes Honey Boo Boo feels a lot like watching a home video. But sometimes, those memories sting. 'We used to be so close as a family … we're close again now, but when the cameras really started coming out, we wasn't as close anymore. It's a little sad,' she said. Burdened by bullying and a hectic filming schedule, Thompson left traditional school to be homeschooled when she was young. Years later, her return to public high school is shown as a major turning point in Here Comes Honey Boo Boo. She's exceptionally smart, which wouldn't surprise anyone who considers how many witty and instantly iconic statements she's responsible for, and defies the not-so-bright stereotypes forced upon people with accents like hers. Thompson is fully committed to school right now, focusing as much as she can. She's officially a junior in college and hoping to become a pediatric ICU nurse. 'I just want my adulthood to be, like, me accomplishing my goals,' she said. 'Eventually, in the future, I want to be a mom and stuff. I don't like to go too in detail because I don't even know what's going to probably happen tomorrow!' Thompson still loves performing, though. 'I like turning on the spark and being energetic and being … fun when in the room. I don't like to have a little sad party,' she said. That's a relief to hear, because Thompson's still technically a part of her family's reality show. They've all come together in recent years after losing her sister Anna 'Chickadee' Cardwell to cancer. Thompson said that, in spite of whatever relationship she has with her mom, she's 'very grateful' for Mama June: Family Crisis. 'It's one of the main reasons I'm able to pay for college. I am very grateful for it, but it's a lot, trying to do college and have the show and everything,' she said. On the show, she's Alana now. In her everyday life, most people still call her Honey Boo Boo when they come up to her. It's not as bad as it used to be, though. 'I remember us first coming to Hollywood, and we were bombarded by paparazzi,' she said. 'I probably get [approached] maybe like five or six times a day. When I first got famous, it was like 20 or 30 times a day.' Thompson laughed when she realized that five or six confrontations per day is still quite a lot, but she's never known anything different. People might have their perceptions of her — they always have — but she's focused on who she's becoming. 'Everybody's always gonna have their own opinion on me, regardless of what I say, but I just want people to know that I really am a hard worker. I really am this happy little bubbly girl … I'm so sweet and I'm not as stuck up and all famous-person as people think I am,' Thompson said. 'I just want people to know that this is my truth.'

Honey Boo Boo Says Mama June Stole Money From Her
Honey Boo Boo Says Mama June Stole Money From Her

Buzz Feed

time25-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Buzz Feed

Honey Boo Boo Says Mama June Stole Money From Her

You know Alana Thompson — and if the name isn't familiar to you, maybe "Honey Boo Boo" is. Alana was and has been a reality TV staple across the last decade and change — from her appearances in Toddlers and Tiaras and Dancing with the Stars to the TV show that launched her to fame, Here Comes Honey Boo Boo. Of course, reality TV fame doesn't always translate to tangible wealth — and in a new interview with People, Alana revealed that she hasn't seen much money at all from her television stardom. "I never had gotten all the money," she said. "I have never, ever received the Here Comes Honey Boo Boo money. I've never seen it. Never ever even heard of it, if I'm being completely honest. I don't know what happened to it." What's more, Alana claims that her mother, Mama June Shannon, effectively stole $35,000 of her earnings from appearing on Dancing with the Stars' "Juniors" season in 2018. People also points out that the issue of what happened with Alana's reality TV earnings played out on the previous season of Mama June: Family Crisis as well. June, for her part, told the publication that she "can't talk" about Alana's allegations regarding her money because it continues to be a part of the upcoming season. 'I let my mama drag me through a lot of shit, but I think my breaking point was when she stole my money,' Alana alleged, further claiming that June recently returned the money to her but didn't directly apologize to her for taking it. Alana went on to claim that, to this day, she doesn't know how much money she actually made from TV. "It was just so long ago," she said. "At that time, Mama always just stressed to us like, 'Oh, I'm setting you up for your future. You have Coogan accounts.' And it's like, 'Where are the Coogan accounts now?'" A Coogan account is a trust that's set up for minors who generate earnings from their work in entertainment or sports. Alana also says she considered suing June at one point, but hesitated to because "I wouldn't probably get anything out of the end of the bargain because by law, she did what was right." "By law, she at least put 20 percent in my account. And the other 80, she said that she used to take care of me. So the law, I feel like wouldn't see really a problem with what she did, I guess." In case you didn't know, Alana also narrates a Lifetime dramatized film about her rise to fame, I Was Honey Boo Boo. In the interview, Alana also says that her work on the film has helped her pay for college. "I'm hoping that there's more work coming for me in the future, but with this movie plus filming on the [Mama June: Family Crisis] show, I've just kind of been saving and making sure that I don't get to the end of my pot," she says, before noting that her sister Pumpkin also set up a Coogan account for her when she obtained custody of Alana in 2022. "I've yet to even go and get that, if I'm being honest, because I'm in the mindset of — if I don't actually need it, I might as well just let it save up," she said. "And when I do actually need it, it'll be there for me." You can watch I Was Honey Boo Boo here.

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