Christopher is a Southern California-based editor and has been with InStyle since 2018. He covers all things entertainment, celebrity, and culture.saw child stars exposing the entertainment industry, detailing sexual abuse, and explaining how major networks turned a blind eye to dark situations, Christy Carlson Romano explained that she won't be giving the show or the team behind it any of her time.
She also pointed out that the documentarians aren't child actors themselves and offered a view that wouldn't be genuine to the experiences that they wanted to cover. "I look at this actually as labor, as a child labor issue, in that there is a union where the child laborers pay the same amount to be covered by the protections that an adult would have, with an intimacy coordinator on set, and if there guns on set, or if there animals on set," she said.