Lauren Conrad Disses MTV For Dumping Her New Reality TV Show
Posted on Fri Feb 4th, 2011 1:34pm PDT By X17 Staff
All together now: bahaha!
Lauren Conrad has major beef with MTV for dropping her new reality series, and naturally, she's released a snippy and defensive statement on the matter.
MTV exec David Janollari told Entertainment Weekly that the network has "decided not to go ahead with the show," which was slated to debut this year and follow Conrad's professional life. "She did do a pilot," Janollari told EW. "There were talks about whether we could somehow manage to put together a special based on that footage but that's also a big question mark based on her interest in that and the finances."
Conrad slammed MTV for wanting to show more of her personal life, and she released the following statement to Us Weekly:
Tick tock tick tock ... that's the sound of her fifteen minutes running out!
Lauren Conrad has major beef with MTV for dropping her new reality series, and naturally, she's released a snippy and defensive statement on the matter.
MTV exec David Janollari told Entertainment Weekly that the network has "decided not to go ahead with the show," which was slated to debut this year and follow Conrad's professional life. "She did do a pilot," Janollari told EW. "There were talks about whether we could somehow manage to put together a special based on that footage but that's also a big question mark based on her interest in that and the finances."
Conrad slammed MTV for wanting to show more of her personal life, and she released the following statement to Us Weekly:
- "We sold a show to MTV, filmed it and are really proud of the final result. MTV felt the subject matter was too high brow for their audience and offered me the opportunity to change the show by incorporating more of my personal life. We agreed going into the project that this show would be an aspirational one, focusing on my career and my goals and not my personal relationships. We delivered the show that we sold and are sorry MTV didn't feel their viewers were savvy enough to appreciate it."