Showbiz

Noughties Reality Shows That Wouldnt Fly Today

Bintano News Desk
2/15/2026
Noughties Reality Shows That Wouldnt Fly Today

The early Noughties saw dozens of reality shows air that pushed the boundaries in order to draw in big viewer numbers. 

Advertisement

From the controversial There's Something About Miriam to Fat Families and Supersized vs Superskinny - many of the concepts simply wouldn't be acceptable in today's world.

One of the most headline garnering shows of the time in the US was America's Next Top Model which aired from 2003 to 2018. 

Soon a new documentary will examine the ups and downs of the reality TV juggernaut that made Tyra Banks a presenting powerhouse. 

It explores how the show shaped fashion and pop culture, and asks whether in hindsight, it was a much darker process than viewers imagined.

Advertisement

But there were plenty of other wild and eyebrow-raising shows around that time that would NEVER be made now...

Tyra Banks is finally addressing the controversies and scandals to plague America's Next Top Model in Reality Check - but that wasn't the only toxic reality show from the Noughties

Tyra Banks is finally addressing the controversies and scandals to plague America's Next Top Model in Reality Check - but that wasn't the only toxic reality show from the Noughties

There's Something About Miriam 

There's Something About Miriam was one of the most controversial reality TV shows of the early 2000s. 

The 2003 Sky One show saw six 'typical lads' enter a dating contest to woo Mexican model Miriam Rivera for a £10,000 prize and romantic yacht trip. 

However, the cruel twist of the show was that the contestants weren't told that Miriam was transgender and hadn't undergone gender-affirming surgery until after the winner was announced - and after the men had flirted with her and even filmed intimate scenes together. 

Advertisement

Despite being promised the 'adventure of a lifetime', the boys sued the show and prevent it from airing, eventually settling for an amount rumoured to be around £500,000. 

The dating show and its impact have since been explored in a Channel 4 documentary Miriam: Death Of A Reality star, which explores the life and tragic death of Miriam Rivera.

There's Something About Miriam was one of the most controversial reality TV shows of the early 2000s

There's Something About Miriam was one of the most controversial reality TV shows of the early 2000s

Six 'typical lads' took part in the show to woo Miriam: Tom Rooke, Toby Green, Scott Gibson, Aron Lane, Dominic Conway and Mark Dimino (all pictured)

Six 'typical lads' took part in the show to woo Miriam: Tom Rooke, Toby Green, Scott Gibson, Aron Lane, Dominic Conway and Mark Dimino (all pictured)

However, the cruel twist of the show was that the contestants weren't told that Miriam was transgender

However, the cruel twist of the show was that the contestants weren't told that Miriam was transgender 

Advertisement

Miriam passed away in Mexico in 2019 aged just 38, and her death was ruled a suicide by the authorities - although her husband Daniel Cuervo has always insisted she was murdered. 

The fates of the six young men are less well known - and most hoped to fade from the spotlight after feeling 'duped' by TV executives and the world of fame. 

But the others have gone on to forge interesting careers since the show, with winner Tom Rooke - then a lifeguard - branching out into acting, while one even dated Kerry Katona. 

Susunu! Denpa Shonen 

BBC viewers were left 'in tears and screaming at the TV' after a documentary about an 'absurdly cruel' reality show which saw a contestant stripped naked, starved and locked up alone for a year aired last year. 

Storyville: The Contestant, which hit BBC iPlayer last summer told the incredible story of 1998 Japanese show Susunu! Denpa Shonen, or Do Not Proceed, Crazy Youth.

Advertisement

Aspiring comedian Tomoaki Hamatsu, then 22, was locked up, asked to strip naked and tasked with entering mail-in magazine competitions until he won one million yen (around £6,000). 

The man, who auditioned for the programme, was told he could leave at any time - but he decided to persist to complete the challenge, staying for a total of 15 months.  

He thought the footage would be aired on TV at a later date - but what he did not know was it was actually being broadcast live to around 17million people per week.  

BBC viewers were left 'in tears and screaming at the TV' after a documentary about an 'absurdly cruel' reality show which saw a contestant stripped naked, starved and locked up alone for a year aired last year

BBC viewers were left 'in tears and screaming at the TV' after a documentary about an 'absurdly cruel' reality show which saw a contestant stripped naked, starved and locked up alone for a year aired last year 

The documentary, originally created in 2023, shocked BBC viewers when it hit the on-demand platform, who took to X to express their horror.

Advertisement

Not only did he have to accrue prize money from the magazine competitions, he had to win everything he needed to survive too - including food, clothing and toilet roll. 

He ate undignified meals such as 5kg of uncooked rice, before he was forced to resort to eating wet dog food on day 80.  

Nasubi was stripped of all his belongings and clothes and left alone with nothing but stacks of magazines, postcards, running water, electricity and heating - without ever signing a contract.

His mental state got to the point that he admitted he wished for death - but he tried to stay sane by writing diaries, dancing and playing games. 

The live stream of his endeavours was one segment, dubbed A Life In Prizes, of the larger programme, which saw lots of ordinary people take on crazy tasks. 

Advertisement

In an interview with The Sun, he said: 'The loneliness affected me much more than not being able to eat or not having clothes. 

'There were so many moments where I thought it probably would be better to die now than keep going.

'The toughest moment was when the rice ran out and I needed to face up to eating dog food. I didn't want to eat it but there was no alternative.'

Nasubi admitted that he was in 'such emotional turmoil that I couldn't sleep' and at points even hallucinated to the extent he believed he had been 'abducted by aliens'.

In his diaries, he wrote: 'I don’t have enough nutrition going to my brain. Being driven to the edge has brought out a madness in me.'

Advertisement

Storyville: The Contestant, which hit BBC iPlayer last summer told the incredible story of 1998 Japanese show Susunu! Denpa Shonen, or Do Not Proceed, Crazy Youth

Storyville: The Contestant, which hit BBC iPlayer last summer told the incredible story of 1998 Japanese show Susunu! Denpa Shonen, or Do Not Proceed, Crazy Youth 

Aspiring comedian Tomoaki Hamatsu, then 22, was locked up, asked to strip naked and tasked with entering mail-in magazine competitions until he won one million yen (around £6,000)

Aspiring comedian Tomoaki Hamatsu, then 22, was locked up, asked to strip naked and tasked with entering mail-in magazine competitions until he won one million yen (around £6,000) 

When he finally reached the number of winnings needed, Nasubi was eventually freed - but producers soon conned him into returning to the hellish experience.

He was flown to what he thought was a celebratory trip to Korea - where the producers worked for three hours to convince him to go through the process again. 

Nasubi pleaded: 'I thought my life was over. So many times I wanted to die.'

Advertisement

He ended up competing for several more weeks, taking him to 434 days in isolation.

The contestant then returned to Japan, where he entered another apartment and stripped naked, thinking he was about to be subjected to the same turmoil again.

But the walls then collapsed to reveal a TV studio with a live audience of fans, with him becoming aware for the first time that his ordeal had been seen by millions.

He had become an icon during his long ordeal, with the Truman Show-esque programme poking fun at him with slapstick noises and suggestive censoring. 

'Without his knowledge or consent', as the BBC iPlayer synopsis explains, 'Nasubi became the most famous television personality in Japan'. 

Advertisement

As well as the record-breaking viewing figures, his diaries from inside also became a bestseller. 

Fat Families

Sky One's Fat Families was hosted by 'former fatty' Steve Miller and saw him mock the participants until they lost weight (pictured with contestants Toni and Neil Blackholly)

Sky One's Fat Families was hosted by 'former fatty' Steve Miller and saw him mock the participants until they lost weight (pictured with contestants Toni and Neil Blackholly) 

Sky One's Fat Families may only have aired for two series in 2010 but Gen Z have revived the programme with horrified youngsters sharing clips on TikTok. 

The show had a cult following due to host and 'former fatty' Steve Miller's approach to weight loss in which he refused to pander to any excuses and would instead go as far to insult the participants.

Steve would spend 24 hours with the overweight families as he monitored their diet and lifestyle choices before issuing them with a healthy living plan that would always result in weight loss. 

Advertisement

He revisited the families to check on their progress in season two of the show, Fat Families: Second Helpings.  

Yet motivational speaker Steve, who lost four stone after becoming overweight, didn't hold back with his use of language, telling viewers he was about to encounter 'one of the fattest families I've ever met in my life' who are 'grazing their way to an early grave'. 

Other examples of shock outbursts saw him brand family members 'right beached blubber bellies' and 'Mr and Mrs Massive Fatty'. 

While he also famously uttered 'Watch out massive fatties, the lard police are in town!'

Supersize vs Superskinny 

Channel 4's Supersize vs Superskinny aired from 2008 to 2014 and saw underweight participants with a dangerously low BMI swap diets with someone who was morbidly obese

Channel 4's Supersize vs Superskinny aired from 2008 to 2014 and saw underweight participants with a dangerously low BMI swap diets with someone who was morbidly obese

Advertisement

Channel 4's Supersize vs Superskinny aired from 2008 to 2014 and saw underweight participants with a dangerously low BMI matched up with someone who was morbidly obese.

 The two were brought to 'the feeding clinic' where they lived together for five days and ate each other's diets under the supervision of Dr Christian Jessen. 

After the experiment they would follow a healthy eating plan for three months before returning for a final weigh-in and health screening.

Critics argued that replacing one unhealthy diet for another in the feeding clinic was taking an unnecessary risk with the contestants' health, to which Channel 4 replied that this all takes place under the supervision of medical experts. 

It was also accused of being 'triggering' for eating disorder sufferers, with Chief Executive of B-eat, Susan Ringwood, saying 'They're deadly, not entertainment.' 

Advertisement

The show introduced a section in which they featured people suffering from eating disorders who were overseen by a specialist psychiatrist and dietician Ursula Philpot.

The Biggest Loser UK

The Biggest Loser UK's contestants were put through such rigorous exercise that some passed out (pictured: trainers Richard Callender and Angie Dowds with host Davina McCall)

The Biggest Loser UK's contestants were put through such rigorous exercise that some passed out (pictured: trainers Richard Callender and Angie Dowds with host Davina McCall) 

A spin off of the popular American show, The Biggest Loser UK aired on Sky Living from 2005 to 2006, before being revived by ITV from 2009 to 2012. 

The programme saw overweight contestants compete to win a cash prize by losing the highest percentage of their starting body weight.

Most recently hosted by Davina McCall, the contestants were put through such rigorous exercise regimes by the trainers that some of them got injured, threw up and even passed out.

Advertisement

Critics of the show argued that it promoted unhealthy, unrealistic and unsustainable methods of weight loss. 

While others claimed it also encouraged a fat-shaming attitude due to viewers repeatedly watching obese contestants lose up to seven stone in three months, framing obesity as a matter of personal responsibility without considering external factors. 

Davina hit back at critics by stating: 'They are not crash-dieting, it's all sensible eating and exercise. 

'They are all amazing. I find it very inspirational seeing people that think they can't change their lives and they need a leg up.'

I Wanna Marry Harry

American women who were duped into believing they were dating Prince Harry in unsetting TV show have since said producers fed them false information to 'skew reality'

American women who were duped into believing they were dating Prince Harry in unsetting TV show have since said producers fed them false information to 'skew reality' 

Advertisement

American women who were duped into believing they were dating Prince Harry in unsetting TV show have since said producers fed them false information to 'skew reality'.

I Wanna Marry Harry was a Fox reality show that aired for one season in May 2014, which followed 12 American women who believed they were competing for a chance for date Prince Harry. Instead, however, it was a lookalike named Matthew Hicks. 

10 years later the former contestants spoke out in the podcast The Bachelor of Buckingham Palace and claimed they were monitored  24/7 with cameras in bedrooms and ordered not to speak to each other off camera. 

The winner of the series Kimberly Birch and other contestants Meghan Jones and Chelsea Brookshire lifted the lid on the controversial reality TV series. 

The contestants underwent psychological evaluation with a psychologist before being flown from the US and taken to Englefield House, an Elizabethan country home in Berkshire.  

Advertisement

While contestants on the show weren't told that the suitor they were fighting for was Prince Harry at first, they were all made to believe it was him thanks to Matthew's strikingly similar looks to the Duke of Sussex and production crews 'breadcrumbing' fabricated stories. 

The women all said they were told they were joining a show called 'Dream Date' and knew little else when they were whisked off to England, where they spent three days isolated in hotel rooms without any access to the outside world, not even books. 

Meghan explained that production kept 'close tabs' on them, claiming they were being monitored 24 hours a day, saying they had cameras in their bedrooms and they were 'mic'd up all day'

Meghan explained that production kept 'close tabs' on them, claiming they were being monitored 24 hours a day, saying they had cameras in their bedrooms and they were 'mic'd up all day'

At the time of the show's premiere, Prince Harry was years away from meeting his wife, Meghan Markle. He still had his bad-boy reputation and was — most importantly — single as he had just ended his relationship with Cressida Bonas. 

Speaking to journalist Scott Bryan on the podcast Kimberly said: 'They started off really subtly, they had Kelly discover a newspaper article on a coffee table about Prince Harry, I don't remember what it said but I remember her telling the rest of us, and one of the staff came and took it away from her.'

Advertisement

Meghan added: 'I remember the production kind of laying these Easter Eggs for us to find, I tried to figure out what their agenda was.' 

Kimberly explained: 'There was a night were we had security outside of our rooms and one of the security guards told a producer ''we have to get him back to the palace, there is a situation there with the royal family'', so whatever was heard, it suggested something that you weren't supposed to hear.

Meghan added: 'Production came out and said ''stop filming, stop filming, this is very serious'', so without camera's on, they gathered all of us girls and producers in Kim and I's room and they told us, ''Your safety is at the utmost importance to us, we are dealing with someone who is a high target individual'', I thought that was their most impactful trick.

'I didn't think they would do anything off camera that would be that shady, so I thought they were actually being realistic.'

Meghan explained that production kept 'close tabs' on them, claiming they were being monitored 24 hours a day, saying they had cameras in their bedrooms and they were 'mic'd up all day'. 

Advertisement

She added: They really kept tabs on us, you couldn't just get hungry in the middle of the day, go to the kitchen and grab an apple, even getting water. For a couple of days of filming I started stealing the digestives they had at breakfast and putting them in my bra, I would take them to my room and hid them in my sock drawer.'

Many of the girls mentioned that they were not allowed to speak to each other unless cameras were rolling, it was called 'put on ice.'

Kimberly, who won the show, said the show thought her a lot about 'brainwashing' because her reality was constantly being skewed

Kimberly, who won the show, said the show thought her a lot about 'brainwashing' because her reality was constantly being skewed

Kimberly said the show taught her a lot about 'brainwashing' because her reality was constantly being skewed.

One of the contestants, Kelly, fell hard for the man she thought was Prince Harry, so much that even the imposter Matthew started to feel uneasy about the lie. 

Advertisement

Matt said he only agreed to do the show if he didn't have to flat-out lie to the women. He was told to act like himself, not a royal, but that didn't stop others from nudging the women's speculation along. 

The show even went as far as staging paparazzi chases and security threats to make the women believe they were dating Prince Harry.

Viewers watched on as the women went on a series of lavish dates with the man whom they believed to be the Prince.

Matt, who is now a father and working as a school teacher, also spoke to the podcast about his time on the show, saying it was the most 'nerve racking' thing he ever had to do. 

Matt revealed he felt 'quite isolated on the show' because the production crew were told to not get too over familiar with him incase they called him by his real name by mistake. 

Advertisement

Even though Matt didn't feel comfortable with the deception, producers appeared to have other ideas and half way through the series, when one of the girls got suspicious, the production crew revealed to the women that Matt was indeed Prince Harry.

Matt said: 'At the time I had no idea they were going to do that. I was a bit miffed and felt quite stressed, I didn't appreciate the way they done it without telling me, but then again I signed up for this, I knew it might happen at some point.

'I only had one option really and that was to just deal with it, so I just carried on the same way really and played it like it didn't happen.'

At the end of the show Kimberly won Matt's heart but he had to break the news that was wasn't Prince Harry like the girls had been led to believe. 

In a bizarre twist, that none of the contestants or Matt knew about, Kimberley was in with a chance to win $300,000, but only if she still accepted Matthew after he revealed he wasn't the Prince.

Advertisement

After winning, she split the prize with Matthew, and after a few show-related meetups, they went their separate ways. 

The show was ultimately pulled from the air after only four episodes due to low ratings. The rest premiered on Fox's website. 

Playing It Straight 

Just last year controversial dating show Playing It Straight set tongues wagging online a whole 20 years after it first aired

Just last year controversial dating show Playing It Straight set tongues wagging online a whole 20 years after it first aired 

Just last year controversial dating show Playing It Straight set tongues wagging online a whole 20 years after it first aired.

The now-cancelled TV series - which first aired back in 2005 - originally broadcast on Fox in the US, but quickly picked up a UK version.

Advertisement

Fans on X have since rediscovered the gameshow, with one claiming that 'it got homophobic so quickly.'

The series was hosted by American television presenter Daphne Brogdon, with Jameela Jamil presenting the UK spin-off alongside and comedian Alan Carr, who narrated it.

The British series aired in 2005 and ran until 2012, with June Sarpong presenting it from 2005 and Jameela in 2012.

The original series saw one woman forced to pick a partner from 14 attractive bachelors, but the twist is that half of the men are gay.

If the woman in question picked a straight man, they split a $1 million prize. 

Advertisement

But if a gay man fooled her, he would get to keep the eye-watering cash to himself.

The original series saw one woman have to pick a partner from 14 attractive bachelors, but the twist is that some of the men are gay

The original series saw one woman have to pick a partner from 14 attractive bachelors, but the twist is that some of the men are gay

Presenter Jameela Jamil hosted the 2012 series which aired on E4 for one season and eight episodes

Presenter Jameela Jamil hosted the 2012 series which aired on E4 for one season and eight episodes

On X, user Corsaren shared a thread of thoughts about the US series, which ran for one season and had a total of eight episodes.

It focused on single girl Jackie, who was looking for her perfect partner, and completely unaware of the plot twist.

Advertisement

They wrote: 'Who do I have to pay to bring this show back on the air holy s**t,' adding, 'I'd say there is at least a 30% chance at this point that the twist is they're all gay.'

Further elaborating on the episode, they shared: 'Oh good, they are now competing with each other to prove how straight they are by talking about her t**s as aggressively as possible lol.'

Contestant Gust was first to get kicked off the show, which appeared to get worse as it went on.

The X user claimed it was before bosses started to ban alcohol on shows, as one of the contestants was 'intentionally tricking another to take too many tequila shots'.

Playing It Straight aired in the UK on Channel 4 from April 8 to May 13, 2005 for a total of six episodes, and later on E4 from January 9 to February 27, 2012 for eight episodes.

Advertisement

The reality show featured one woman in a Mexican villa with a group of men, some of whom were gay, and she had to identify the straight men to win the £100,000 prize. 

The Swan 

Just a few months ago a woman who went under the knife on one of the most controversial American makeover shows has revealed how she was scarred for life from the series

Just a few months ago a woman who went under the knife on one of the most controversial American makeover shows has revealed how she was scarred for life from the series 

Just a few months ago a woman who went under the knife on one of the most controversial American makeover shows has revealed how she was scarred for life from the series. 

The Swan, which ran for two seasons from 2004 on US network Fox, saw a group of  women participate in a pageant after undergoing a three-month transformation.

The everyday women, titled 'ugly ducklings' would go under the knife, have their diets overhauled and their wardrobes completely changed in order to become beauty queens. 

Advertisement

The three-month experiment gave women access to a therapist, dentist, cosmetic surgeon and a personal trainer in order to become more conventionally attractive. 

The winner of the beauty pageant at the end of the series would be dubbed 'The Swan' - there was no cash prize for them to take home. 

While it drew in a huge 15million viewers on its launch, it received mostly negative reviews from critics, who hit out it was 'misogynistic' and 'hurtful', leading to its downfall just months after its initial release.

And since, a small handful of women who took part in the series have spoken out about the not-so-pageant-ready after effects, with one even citing surgery complications and mental health problems, of taking part in the show. 

It led to Entertainment Weekly ranking the programme the worst reality show ever produced, and VICE featuring it in their documentary, Dark Side of Reality TV, calling it the most 'bizarre and offensive reality TV show of all time'. 

Advertisement

Now, one former contestant, Belinda Bessant, has opened up on her horror experience on the show, admitting it left her with scars on her face, and regrets over being pushed towards some surgeries. 

Speaking to Mel Magazine, the former reality star admitted she signed up for the series after an advert appeared during an episode of The Price Is Right. 

Advertising an opportunity to 'change her life', she admitted she 'didn't hesitate to see what it was all about' having struggled with depression as a single mother. 

Four months after being cast in the show, she was flown to Los Angeles to be given 'medical and psychological tests' to ensure she was fit for the show. 

The Swan, which ran for two seasons from 2004 on US network Fox, saw a group of women participate in a pageant after undergoing a three-month transformation

The Swan, which ran for two seasons from 2004 on US network Fox, saw a group of women participate in a pageant after undergoing a three-month transformation 

Advertisement

Two months later, Belinda recalled the cameras showing up at her house and being whisked away from her home to begin the process.

She told the publication: 'This was back in the heyday of reality TV: Everybody dreamed of being on some type of TV show... a lawyer who who looked at the show’s contract tried to tell me I shouldn’t sign it, but I did anyway because the allure of being on reality TV was too exciting to turn down.'

Belinda was forced to leave her house, job and children behind for four months as part of the process - sending them the $500 (£380) she was paid each week for being on the show.

She was encouraged to go under the knife, with the single mother opted for an eye surgery known as a Blepharoplasty, face and body liposuction, a breast reduction and veneers.

Belinda continued: 'All of the surgeries were within the first two weeks; my first operation was 13 hours under anesthesia, and my second was one week later.'

Advertisement

During the women's recoveries, they were not allowed to access TV, mainstream media or buy magazines, with once-a-week calls home limited to ten minutes.

Instead, the women were 'chaperoned' everywhere and kept 'trapped in their own world' until the filming had finished and the pageant had aired on screens. 

Right up until the moment the women walked out for the pageant, the true competitive nature of the show was kept 'secret' from the women. 

While Belinda accepts that some of the surgeries she had have helped her in her life, she admitted to having regrets for those that left her with 'scars' and 'hair loss'. 

'The before pictures were made to make us look as ugly as possible,' she continued. 'I had beautiful eyebrows and eyes, I wasn't unhappy with my face structure... today you can see three vertical scars on my head, which are made worse by the hair loss.'

Advertisement

Belinda was encouraged to go under the knife, with the single mother opted for an eye surgery known as a Blepharoplasty, face and body liposuction, a breast reduction and veneers

Belinda was encouraged to go under the knife, with the single mother opted for an eye surgery known as a Blepharoplasty, face and body liposuction, a breast reduction and veneers

Belinda stressed that she feels 'embarrassed more than anything' to tell people she was on the show, after the 'editing' made her look 'obsessed with looks'. 

She concluded that 'to this day she doesn't talk about it', because she doesn't want 'negativity' from the series involved in her life. 

Scenes on the show, which first aired in 2005, saw Belinda explain the reasons why she took to the series, admitting she 'used to be pretty'.

In the episode, she told the cameras: 'I'm 28 years old, I used to have the perfect body, and I used to be pretty and I used to be able to walk down the street and have guys chasing me.

Advertisement

'Not having that now, it makes me feel horrible.

'Unfortunately I ended up with the wrong guy, I wouldn't want to talk to any of the men from my past because they are not good people. I ended up in several abusive relationships.

'My dream for myself is to learn to know that I deserve someone who will treat me good, but when I look in the mirror, I see a big fat cow.'

On her emotional reveal, Belinda told the show's hosts: 'One thing I've learned here is that beauty comes from the inside and I'm happy with who I am right now.'

Secret Eaters

Channel 4's Secret Eaters ran from 2012 to 2015 and saw host Anna Richardson get to the bottom of baffled contestants who couldn't figure out why they were overweight

Channel 4's Secret Eaters ran from 2012 to 2015 and saw host Anna Richardson get to the bottom of baffled contestants who couldn't figure out why they were overweight

Advertisement

Channel 4's Secret Eaters ran from 2012 to 2015 and saw host Anna Richardson get to the bottom of baffled contestants who couldn't figure out why they were overweight.

Using secret cameras and private investigators they would then be followed without their knowledge and have all the food they consumed recorded.   

At the end of the week, they were confronted about what they had eaten, shown footage of them eating and told how many calories they had consumed while looking at a giant table filled with all the meals they'd consumed in the week. 

The show was criticised for bringing an element of 'shame' around eating, as well as the hidden camera element. 

Mini segments within the show would film unsuspecting members of the public dining, before they were confronted with the reality of how many calories were in their meals.

 America's Next Top Model

America's Next Top Model was notorious for dangerous runway challenges, problematic photo challenges and disastrous makeovers (pictured, host Tyra Banks)

America's Next Top Model was notorious for dangerous runway challenges, problematic photo challenges and disastrous makeovers (pictured, host Tyra Banks) 

Advertisement

In her 'fight against the fashion industry,' Tyra pushed the boundaries of taste on more than one occasion including the infamous swapped ethnicities 'blackface' shoot for a Got Milk? ad

In her 'fight against the fashion industry,' Tyra pushed the boundaries of taste on more than one occasion including the infamous swapped ethnicities 'blackface' shoot for a Got Milk? ad 

America's Next Top Model - which aired for 24 seasons spanning 2003-2018 on UPN, The CW and VH1 - was notorious for dangerous runway challenges, problematic photo challenges and disastrous makeovers. 

In her 'fight against the fashion industry,' host Tyra Banks pushed the boundaries of taste on more than one occasion including the infamous swapped ethnicities 'blackface' shoot for a Got Milk? ad during cycle 4. 

Contestants have also complained about being fat shamed or forced into undergoing cosmetic procedures on the show. 

Now Tyra is finally addressing the various controversies and scandals in new Netflix documentary Reality Check.  

Advertisement

'I haven't really said much, but now it's time,' the 52-year-old model-turned-presenter admitted. 'I knew I went too far.'

Tyra continued: 'It was very, very intense. But you guys were demanding it, so we kept pushing more and more and more.'

Featuring new interviews with Banks, former judges Jay Manuel, J. Alexander and Nigel Barker, along with past contestants and winners, the series takes a candid look at the show’s meteoric rise – and the countless controversies that followed. 

Reality Check: Inside America's Next Top Model premieres February 16 on Netflix

aggregated from the Daily Mail.

READ ORIGINAL STORY