Anonymous wrote:Rich people are just like us with the same problems but more intense. I feel really sad for Paris. She was a wild rebellious teenager in NYC who was sent away by her parents because they didn't know how to deal with her and would rather paint a picture perfect image of their family. It's no surprise that when she came back from Utah, that she never told her parents what had happened. Why do that when her mom would just sweep it all under the rug. Her experiences also explains why she has such trust issues and why she has intense fear of being controlled. She seems so lonely.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She has the same hook nose that hangs down and ptotic eye but has had upper lip filler it looks like. I actually like her more/think she if smart for not fixing her face- as I think with her features it could easily be botched.
Her voice is so deep and the vocal fry so pronounced she sounds like Theranos inventor/fraud Elizabeth Holmes.
Not into the documentary/but watched a clip on tv.
She is still better looking than you.
Anonymous wrote:The parents fodvwhatvthey thought was best. She was a rich teenager who could have been raped. killed, or kidnapped. She could have overdosed or gotten drugged. She was underage partying at clubs. They were desperate to keep her safe and whatever extreme measures used by the school were better than just letting her run wild and be badly hurt. Parenting is a thankless job.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I found this movie and Paris still incredibly phony. Her voice fry is there to convince us that she has inner life and feelings, that she's deep and sensitive. It's not working.
Her biggest trauma is not the boarding school, but the fact that her former assistant and closet organizer, Kim Kardashian became huge and influential in a way that Paris will never be (or never again).
This old and tired Hollywood trick that always comes down to some sort of confession, big secret and childhood trauma is pulled by celebrities of all kinds when there is really nothing else left to say or do. And that's disappointing. She is too young for that.
Finally! This thread is otherwise full of such damned dumbasses. She’s a racist white knt who is mad as hell that her assistant has a life she’d prefer.
My friend’s daughter tutored her brothers for a time in NYC. Paris was a monster to her and everyone around her but the second she gets like serious about “her truth,” a whole slew of not-smart women come a running with the “aww” reaction.
In the documentary, her sister Nicky asks her if she ever apologized to her mom and dad for her behavior when they were young. Which was telling to me. I don't think her parents just sent her off to a therapeutic boarding school without grounding her, etc. No one mentions therapy in this documentary. I hope Paris is getting some. I think she could use it.
Anonymous wrote:I like how casual her clothing is when she’s not making appearances.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I found this movie and Paris still incredibly phony. Her voice fry is there to convince us that she has inner life and feelings, that she's deep and sensitive. It's not working.
Her biggest trauma is not the boarding school, but the fact that her former assistant and closet organizer, Kim Kardashian became huge and influential in a way that Paris will never be (or never again).
This old and tired Hollywood trick that always comes down to some sort of confession, big secret and childhood trauma is pulled by celebrities of all kinds when there is really nothing else left to say or do. And that's disappointing. She is too young for that.
Finally! This thread is otherwise full of such damned dumbasses. She’s a racist white knt who is mad as hell that her assistant has a life she’d prefer.
My friend’s daughter tutored her brothers for a time in NYC. Paris was a monster to her and everyone around her but the second she gets like serious about “her truth,” a whole slew of not-smart women come a running with the “aww” reaction.
Anonymous wrote:I saw a very pained and humbled person tonight.
While still beautiful, up close one can see age creeping up on her.
No spoilers here ⚠️, but when she talked about her past experiences in her school in Provo as well as how it affected her in later years, I felt I really empathize w/her.
I also was sent away and have been physically abused by ex-boyfriends in my past.
This documentary is so real >>> It shows Paris in such a different light.
Anonymous wrote:I found this movie and Paris still incredibly phony. Her voice fry is there to convince us that she has inner life and feelings, that she's deep and sensitive. It's not working.
Her biggest trauma is not the boarding school, but the fact that her former assistant and closet organizer, Kim Kardashian became huge and influential in a way that Paris will never be (or never again).
This old and tired Hollywood trick that always comes down to some sort of confession, big secret and childhood trauma is pulled by celebrities of all kinds when there is really nothing else left to say or do. And that's disappointing. She is too young for that.