Adrianne Curry, the first winner of America's Next Top Model, clapped back against the idea of Netflix's upcoming docuseries exposing the behind-the-scenes drama of the reality TV competition.
America’s Next Top Model premiered in 2003 and ran for more than a decade, becoming one of the most influential reality competition series before ending in 2018.
After announcing Netflix's three-part docuseries Reality Check: Inside America's Next Top Model, which will feature Banks along with judges Jay Manuel, Miss J. Alexander, and Nigel Barker, Curry shared her thoughts on social media.
In a post on X (formerly Twitter), she explained that she doesn't "trust people to not manipulate things I say for tv" and doesn't like the idea of a "woke lens" re-investigating the show's drama.
Curry went on to share on Instagram that she wouldn't be appearing in the docuseries, as she's "hard retired," and reiterated that she doesn't trust her words not to be twisted on-screen. After winning America's Next Top Model, Curry went on to star VH1's The Surreal Life, where she met former Brady Bunch star Christopher Knight.
The pair's age-gap romance — Curry was 24 when they wed in 2006 while Knight was 49 — was a controversial topic at the time, but they went on to become reality stars in their own right throughout the 2000s before divorcing in 2012.
Curry has long been outspoken about her time on ANTM, explaining that she wasn't compensated fairly for her time on the show, nor was the aftermath anything like what she'd been promised. After appearing on several other reality TV shows in the 2000s and 2010s, Curry chose to retire from the spotlight, but shares her warnings against trusting reality producers to tell a genuine story often on social media.