The reform was started years ago by former contestants, including Turner, Cycle 8's Brittany Hatch, Sarah VonderHaar, Cycle 1's Giselle Samson, and Cycle 9's Sarah Hartshorne. Tuner shared an update on her social media about the reform following the intense spotlight on Tyra Banks and the Netflix docuseries.
Turner explained in the video that they all met with the legislative board to begin conversations on changing legislation and "amending current laws to bring stronger protections to reality TV contestants, specifically after our experiences with ANTM."
View this post on InstagramThe alum adds that the reform isn't based solely on one individual but multiple women "speaking out" and wanting "real change" for the next generation of women. In 2023, VonderHaar and Hatch spoke with Entertainment Weekly after they filed separate wage claims against Banks and producers Ken Mok and Anthony Dominici.
Turner also claimed in the Vice TV series, Dark Side of Reality TV, that production had manipulated her interview after being stuck in a room for seven hours, being asked questions. They had used a portion of her words as a response to her losing Cycle 24, which was "not at all what happened."
Netflix's Reality Check dove deep into the series's controversies, like Banks' response to Shandi Sullivan's alleged sexual assault caught on camera. The rifts between Banks and the series judges, and the controversial photoshoots.
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