If there was an upside to doing Quiet on Set: The Dark Side of Kids TV, Drake Bell said it would be the strangers who have approached him with gratitude before sharing their own sad tales of abuse.
21.03.2024 - 15:47 / perezhilton.com
Drake Bell has no hard feelings for Josh Peck!
Earlier this week, Drake came forward as the victim of sexual assault at the hands of his former Nickelodeon dialogue coach Brian Peck. The revelation was revealed in the Investigation Discovery docuseries, Quiet on Set: The Dark Side of Kids TV, which detailed how several former child stars were negatively affected by their time at the kids’ channel.
In light of the vulnerable reveal, in which Drake identified himself as the unnamed minor in Brian’s 2004 sexual assault conviction, many fans have turned to his former co-star Josh for some public showings of support. And they’ve been severely disappointed by the silence!
Related: Drake Bell BLASTS Boy Meets World Stars For Defending Child Molester!
All Josh has posted since the doc began airing is a seemingly cryptic and shady TikTok in which he mouthed the words:
Yeesh!!!
Was that directed at his former colleague or just super poorly timed? It’s hard to know, but the video and his continued silence about Drake’s difficult past have placed him at the center of a TON of backlash ever since! The Oppenheimer star’s socials have been filled with nasty comments like:
But it turns out there’s NO bad blood between the former on-screen brothers! The Found A Way crooner took to TikTok on Wednesday to shut down the hate, revealing:
But that doesn’t mean he and Josh (who is not related to the convicted sex offender despite having the same last name) haven’t spoken! Drake shared:
That’s good! Not every conversation — especially about something as private and serious as this — has to be public! It’s no secret that the actors have never been that close anyway. Because of all their history, it’s probably more meaningful to reconnect in
If there was an upside to doing Quiet on Set: The Dark Side of Kids TV, Drake Bell said it would be the strangers who have approached him with gratitude before sharing their own sad tales of abuse.
Drake Bell and Rider Strong are speaking.
Drake Bell opened up more in the fifth episode of Quiet On Set: The Dark Side of Kids TV.
Emily Longeretta Drake Bell is continuing to tell his story in the latest episode of ID’s “Quiet on Set: The Dark Side of Kids TV” documentary. Titled “Breaking the Silence,” the fifth episode, which aired on Sunday, April 7, began with Bell speaking to host Soledad O’Brien about what has happened since he came forward for the first time about being sexually assaulted by Brian Peck.
Drake Bell revealed on Quiet on Set: The Dark Side of Kids TV that Brian Peck, a former Nickelodeon dialogue coach, abused him.
Emily Longeretta Drake Bell is healing alongside Rider Strong. Strong, who became close friends with dialogue coach Brian Peck after meeting on “Boy Meets World,” was one of the many actors who wrote a letter in defense of Peck’s character when Bell accused him of sexual assault in 2003. At the time, the victim of the assault was listed as John Doe, but Bell came forward revealing it was him in Investigation Discovery’s “Quiet on Set: The Dark Side of Kids TV.” (At the time, Peck pleaded no contest to two charges of child sexual abuse, was sentenced to 16 months in prison and had to register as a sex offender.) Now, more than 20 years later, Bell and Strong have connected.
Drake Bell has no hard feelings for Josh Peck.
Drake Bell is opening up about a song he penned for his debut album, where he alluded to the sexual abuse he suffered as a teenager.
Drake Bell doesn’t think Nickelodeon‘s response to Quiet on Set was up to par.
Emily Longeretta Directors Beth and Rich Correll, whose letters defending Brian Peck in his court case against Drake Bell were made public in the recent “Quiet on Set: The Dark Side of Kids TV” documentary, are apologizing. “We extend our deepest apologies to Drake Bell and his family, and we deeply regret our decision many years ago to request leniency for someone who we later learned had committed a horrible crime and caused so much pain and trauma to Drake and others. If we had known the truth at the time the letters were written, we never would have written them,” the Corrells said in an exclusive statement to Variety.
Drake Bell is in the middle of the spotlight after the release of the bombshell documentary Quiet On Set. The Nickelodeon star detailed years of abuse at the hands of Brian Peck, opening the floodgates for conversations about the treatment of children in entertainment. The actor has been on a personal rollercoaster for years, finding himself in his own legal battles, getting probation in July 2021 for child endangerment.
Quiet On Set “pretty empty”.In the third episode of the four-part series that aired on Discovery, Bell opened up about being sexually abused by dialogue coach Brian Peck aged 15. He was reportedly abused by Peck whilst working on Nickelodeon’s The Amanda Show from 1999 to 2002.
Drake Bell opened up in his first interview after participating in the Quiet on Set: The Dark Side of Kids TV docuseries.
Drake Bell got real about why he shared his sexual assault story for the first time.
Drake Bell revealed on the ID docu-series Quiet On Set: The Dark Side of Kids TV that he was sexually assaulted by former Nickelodeon dialogue coach Brian Peck.
The stars of Ned’s Declassified School Survival Guide are full of regret about the inappropriate comments they made about one of the darkest times in Drake Bell’s life. Earlier this week, Devon Werkheiser
Well, this is a horrifying extra bit of news following everything we’ve learned about Nickelodeon this week.
Josh Peck is sharing his support for Drake Bell and all child stars who have opened up about experiencing abuse on set.
Well this is f**king disturbing as can be… We’ve been covering the sad story of In
Josh Peck, of the Nickelodeon hit Drake & Josh, has issued a statement of support of his old co-star Drake Bell, who recently revealed that he’d been sexually abused by a show dialogue coach when he was just 15.