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The stars of America’s Next Top Model have revealed the very strict rules they had to follow on the show, claiming producers used ‘cult techniques’ to manipulate them.
Shocking details from the show have emerged in recent weeks, after Netflix’s expose, Reality Check, revealed producers covered up an incident of sexual assault, while also shining a modern spotlight on the past incidents of racism and fat-shaming.
Now, a rival documentary by E! entitled Dirty Rotten Scandals, has uncovered even more allegations of mistreatment.
The two-part docuseries features former contestants from the show, as well as judge Janice Dickinson, with no involvement from show host Tyra Banks.
One such contributor was Sarah Hartshorne from cycle nine, who competed as a plus-size model but ended up losing weight from the stress of the competition.
‘I was told I was too thin to be a plus-size model but too fat to be America’s Next Top Model,’ she mused.
The stars of America’s Next Top Model have revealed the strict rules they had to follow on the show, claiming producers used ‘cult techniques’ to control them (pictured: Sarah Hartshorne)
‘I was told I was too thin to be a plus-size model but too fat to be America’s Next Top Model,’ Sarah mused (she is pictured on the show in 2007)
Sarah said: ‘We were so sucked into just doing what they wanted and we were just following every order because Tyra Banks was just the air that we breathed’ (Tyra pictured in 2005)
Revealing the depths to which the contestants were controlled on the show, she said: ‘I read the book Cultish, about cults of every level and the tools they all use… Top Model they used all of them.’
She explained: ‘They controlled when we went to the bathroom, when we ate, when we slept, when we were allowed to speak to each other.
‘They isolated us from our friends and family, we weren’t allowed to have magazines, newspapers, anything that showed what day or time it was.
‘[They used] the same phrase over and over again, “if you violate the confidentiality agreement we will dock your wages for the rest of your life”.
‘We were so sucked into just doing what they wanted and we were just following every order because Tyra Banks was just the air that we breathed. We would do anything for her.’
She added that they were told the cameras could film them at all times while working and during their downtime in the model house.
The one exception was if they were alone in the bathroom, but she claimed producers told them to ‘shower together… for the environment’.
Sarah continued: ‘If you didn’t follow the rules we would be punished, they could take away our books and take away our iPods so you’d have to sit in silence for hours.’
On the intensity of the process, Sarah revealed they would spend between 12 and 18 hours filming the elimination days, meaning they’d be up until the early hours.
She recalled: ‘On the first day a crew member warned us, “a girl faints every week so if you feel like you’re feeling faint, don’t be a hero, raise your hand and someone will come help you.” First day it was me! I had to raise my hand.’
Cycle two winner Yoanna House also struggled with the strict rules.
She explained: ‘The rules in the house were challenging.
‘The lights were always on, even when you were ready to go to bed. There was no cell phone usage. You were not allowed to leave the house, no windows were allowed to be opened.
‘You’re almost an animal. It felt like it was an experiment, to see how easily we could break.’
Cycle two winner Yoanna House also struggled with the strict rules. She explained: ‘You’re almost an animal. It felt like it was an experiment, to see how easily we could break’
Yoanna recalled: There was no cell phone usage. You were not allowed to leave the house, no windows were allowed to be opened’ (pictured on the show in 2004)
Lisa D’Amato, who competed on cycle five then returned and won cycle 17, noted: ‘All of us were sleep deprived, all of us weren’t able to eat enough food’
Despite her uncomfortable experience on the show, Lisa returned six years later for the All Stars cycle in a bid for ‘redemption’ and to ‘change her life’ (pictured on All Stars in 2011)
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Lisa D’Amato, who competed on cycle five then returned and won cycle 17, noted: ‘All of us were sleep deprived, all of us weren’t able to eat enough food.
‘They know what they’re doing and it’s intentional.’
During her initial stint on the show, Lisa was filmed in the model house while intoxicated, and claims there has been a stigma around her drinking ever since.
She was abused by her mother in childhood and claimed that producers continuously put pressure to discuss her trauma on camera, somethin that made her incredibly uncomfortable and encouraged her erratic behaviour.
Reflecting on a scene in which she drank too much and fell asleep outside, she explained: ‘I wasn’t eating correctly, I wasn’t sleeping, and I probably had a couple too many glasses of wine.
‘I was always one moment away from fully losing it. Because they were weaponising my childhood trauma, they wanted to f**k with me emotionally. Tyra made me look absolutely crazy on purpose.
She noted that when co-star Coryn Woitel labelled her an ‘alcoholic b**h’, it ‘set the tone of what I’ve been called around the globe for 15 years.
‘I was set up to be publicly humiliated on repeat forever, so Tyra could make money.’
Despite her uncomfortable experience on the show, Lisa returned six years later for the All Stars cycle in a bid for ‘redemption’ and to ‘change her life’.
Yet she revealed she quickly realised that things wouldn’t be better the second time around, claiming the contestants were rounded up and forced to sit in a van for four hours with paper bags over their heads so they couldn’t see their surroundings.
She described the experience as resembling the controversial psychological study, The Stanford Prison Experiment.
Tyra declined to comment when approached by E! The Daily Mail have reached out to Tyra and fellow producer Ken Mok.
Dirty Rotten Scandals: America’s Next Top Model premieres March 11 at 9:00pm ET/PT with two back-to-back episodes
