Pop Culture

Maitland Ward Says Hollywood Treated Child Stars Like ‘Products Being Sold’

From sitcom paychecks to six figures a month, Maitland Ward breaks down the realities of child stardom and why she says Hollywood treated young actors like products.

'Boy Meets World' Star Maitland Ward Says Child Stars are Just 'Products Being Sold'
Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images

Maitland Ward isn’t sugarcoating her experience as a former child star.

In the latest installment of Hollywood Demons—titled Child Stars Gone Wild and airing April 27 on Investigation Discovery—the Boy Meets World alum lays out a blunt assessment of how young actors are treated in Hollywood, calling them “products being sold” while comparing that system to the autonomy she’s found on platforms like OnlyFans.

Ward, who joined Boy Meets World in its later seasons as Rachel McGuire, used the episode to break down both the financial and emotional realities of her early career.

“On Boy Meets World, I think I made $20,000 or $25,000 an episode,” she said, adding that even steady TV work came with uncertainty. “You don’t have all the guarantees out there,” she explained, according to Entertainment Weekly, pointing to the constant risk of being written off a show.

That instability, she says, stands in stark contrast to her current business model. “In porn or OnlyFans, I can get six figures a month,” Ward said. “There is also my adult film sales, and I am creating this brand. I can make it go for as long as I want it to go.”

The episode also digs into how Ward viewed Hollywood at the time. “They looked at these young actors as like property coming in,” she said. “The studios… wanted to mold and form these young actors into what they needed them to be.”

She described the environment as a “factory,” adding, “You were just a product being sold, and you knew that yourself.”

Ward’s career path has been anything but typical. After early roles on The Bold and the Beautiful and later appearances in projects like White Chicks, she stepped away from mainstream acting in 2007.

Years later, she built a following through cosplay and social media before transitioning into adult films in 2019—quickly earning industry awards and building a direct-to-consumer fanbase.

She also emphasized how different the on-set experience feels now. Adult film production, she said, has been “the most comfortable I have ever felt on a set,” particularly because “nobody is shy to have the conversation” around intimate scenes. That openness, she argues, has contributed to a stronger sense of control over her work and image.

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