What did Courtney Stodden accuse Chrissy Teigen of?

HOLLYWOOD socialite and reality star Courtney Stodden declared that Chrissy Teigen had less than savory things to say about them many years ago.

In response, Chrissy apologized to Courtney on social media for her past behavior.

What did Courtney Stodden accuse Chrissy Teigen of?

Courtney Stodden, who identifies as non-binary, claimed Chrissy Teigen bullied her over social media ten years ago.

Courtney alleged Chrissy sent her a flurry of threatening direct messages over Twitter after she married her first husband Doug Hutchison, who as 50 at the time, when she was just 16-years-old.

Courtney told The Daily Beast that the bullying got so bad, "there have probably been five times that I've felt like I wanted to kill myself — and made the actions to go ahead and do it."

"[Chrissy] wouldn’t just publicly tweet about wanting me to take 'a dirt nap' but would privately DM me and tell me to kill myself. Things like, 'I can’t wait for you to die,'" they alleged.

She claimed that Chrissy's break from Twitter due to bullying was "hypocritical" because she suffered verbal abuse at the hands of Chrissy when she was young.

"I think, for me, because I experienced so much harassment and bullying from her when I was just 16 years old, just 17 years old, just 18 years old, at a time when I needed help. Like, I was being abused."

They said that if their father, who passed away, had been around, that they "wouldn't feel so helpless in these circumstances, with so many of these Hollywood predators."

What did Chrissy Teigen say about Courtney Stodden's allegations?

Chrissy Teigen took to Twitter to respond to Courtney's allegations of harrasment.

She publicly apologized to Courtney for her actions in a series of Tweets that read:

"Not a lot of people are lucky enough to be held accountable for all their past bullshit in front of the entire world. I’m mortified and sad at who I used to be. I was an insecure, attention seeking troll. I am ashamed and completely embarrassed at my behavior but that…"

"is nothing compared to how I made Courtney feel. I have worked so hard to give you guys joy and be beloved and the feeling of letting you down is nearly unbearable, truly. These were not my only mistakes and surely won’t be my last as hard as I try but god I will try!!"

She wrote that she had attempted to get in touch with Courtney privately to apologize for her past harassment.

"I have tried to connect with Courtney privately but since I publicly fueled all this, I want to also publicly apologize. I’m so sorry, Courtney. I hope you can heal now knowing how deeply sorry I am."

"And I am so sorry I let you guys down. I will forever work on being better than I was 10 years ago, 1 year ago, 6 months ago," she concluded.

What Chrissy Teigen say about Matthew Perry and Ben Affleck?

Chrissy branded Matthew Perry and Ben Affleck "creepy and "desperate" for messaging younger women on dating apps.

Both actors have been exposed in recent weeks for their antics on the exclusive celebrity dating app Raya.

Chrissy slammed the stars for their "creepy video replies" but also called the women "tacky" for leaking the private messages.

The model tweeted: "I agree celebs shouldn't be making these creepy desperate video replies on raya but it's tacky to release private messages.

"Ya both wrong, congrats."

This week, Matthew, 51, was called out for his Facetime with TikTok user Kate Haralson, who was just 19 when they matched in May 2020.

Kate told Page Six that she met Matthew on membership-based, social network app Raya when she was a teenager last May.

She alleges the actor – who got engaged to Molly Hurwitz in November -requested they moved their conversations to FaceTime almost immediately after they began talking.

Ben Affleck, meanwhile, went viral earlier this month after he sent a woman a video on Instagram asking why she unmatched him.

However, it turns out Ben's account was real as she shared his video message in a hilarious TikTok that has been viewed over a million times.

    Source: Read Full Article