Because nobody had to go home with us but us. ![]() To be rehashing things that unbeknownst to them that we worked through, yeah, nah. You don’t know the work I’d been doing to save my relationship. So I think, it was them wanting more from me and me saying, ‘oh hell no.’ It did have something to do with pay, but also, you couldn’t pay me enough to bring my personal life on this particular show. “At that point, that storyline was getting old. “It was mutual for my exiting because I wasn’t going to give them anymore than I was already giving,” she said. And while Faust took a pay cut to avoid doing so, Davis decided it was just time to go. This was a gripe that her former cast mate and BFF Mimi Faust shared about being hounded to put her own relationship with Ty Young on TV. She would eventually leave the show at a time when producers wanted Davis, who is bisexual, to share more about her personal relationship. Even losing friendships, I still mean more to me. “Again, my sanity means more to me than that show did. I mean more to me than that show does,” she said. She was able to set some boundaries, and if you noticed, keep her personal life away from cameras unlike the vast majority of main and supporting cast members. She had a good lawyer so things played out differently for her. ![]() It’s okay to say no.”ĭavis said that a lot of LHHATL cast members who came and went would feel obligated to go to such lengths because of bad contracts they signed. Not if it’s making you feel like sh-t in the bottom of your stomach. I didn’t care about all of the in and outs of what everybody else cared about. My mother and my grandmother were watching the show. “Y’all couldn’t threaten me with sh-t about not being in a scene or not getting paid because my mental health meant more to me, my integrity meant more to me, my morals. “It was trying sometimes for me too, but I always knew my stance,” she added. I’m not going to name specific people but there were times where I literally had someone tell me, ‘I sold my soul to the devil.'” And I can say that firsthand, from people that I’ve worked with on the show, there were times off-camera, tears in my garage. “If you’re not mentally prepared going into it, and you don’t have people around you that’s mentally helping you prepare, then yeah, you’re going to fall by the wayside. “I think when you don’t go in with a sense of, ‘I’m going to stay in control no matter how big or small my role is,’ you’re going to get f–ked up mentally,” she said. She said some would go to great lengths to secure screen time and a check, only to feel bad about the way they’d allowed themselves to be portrayed. When speaking with friend Melyssa Ford for her podcast I’m Here for the Food, Davis opened up about the toll reality TV takes on those who partake in it, including her former cast members. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.The stunning socialite quietly exited the series in 2017 and would eventually leave Atlanta for Los Angeles to pursue bigger and better things. ![]() "However I’m still recovering from what really happened so thanks so much for all the prayers and concerns." "As you know I’ve been off social media for a while to rest mentally, so little did I know that during my medical scare it was already been said that I had a heart attack, I was in a coma. Her body went into sepsis, where an infection in the blood can threaten organs and possibly be fatal if untreated, and required immediate surgery, she wrote. However, Spice addressed the rumors with an Instagram post in November, in which she clarified that she was hospitalized after suffering a damaged hernia. ![]() Last fall, while Spice had gone quiet on social media, fans began to circulate rumors that she was in a coma due to complications related to plastic surgery. 1 on Billboard's reggae albums chart, and her debut studio album, "10," was Grammy-nominated in 2022 for best reggae album.Īfter guest-starring in a prior season of "Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta," Spice joined the main cast in 2019 for the show's eighth season. Her 2018 mixtape, "Captured," peaked at No. Spice first found fame in the 2000s as a featured artist on Vybz Kartel's single "Romping Shop," which sampled Ne-Yo's "Miss Independent." The song spent 15 weeks on the Billboard Hot 100 for R&B/hip-hop songs. During the episode, he placed a call to Spice, who on speakerphone exclaimed to the hosts, "That's my baby daddy, that's mine!"
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |