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What Pamela Anderson reveals about her life in highly anticipate­d Netflix documentar­y

- Griffin Jaeger

WARNING: This story con‐ tains distressin­g details.

Pamela Anderson is finally telling her story on her own terms in the highly anticipat‐ ed documen‐ tary Pamela: A Love Story, which is being released Tues‐ day on Netflix.

The documentar­y, co-pro‐ duced by one of Anderson's two sons, Brandon Lee, and directed by Ryan White, gives viewers an honest and open account of Anderson's life — from early childhood to Play‐ boy model and Hollywood vixen — through a series of never-before-seen home videos and private diary en‐ tries.

The audience is introduced to Anderson, 55, in a way she hasn't been seen before — on camera with no makeup and situated comfortabl­y and ca‐ sually in her childhood home in Ladysmith, B.C.

Here are the biggest take‐ aways from the film.

Anderson's difficult up‐ bringing

The Canadian American ac‐ tress, model and animal rights advocate describes being ex‐ posed to her parents' fraught relationsh­ip from an early age. The couple would often fight, and her father was a big drinker who at times became violent, exposing Anderson and her brother to domestic abuse.

At times, they would leave her father and live on welfare, and Anderson says she can still remember the taste of the powdered milk they would drink. But her parents would eventually reunite — leading the troubled cycle to begin again.

WATCH | Trailer for Pamela: A Love Story:

This early exposure to abuse and a toxic relation‐ ship shaped Anderson's views on love, relationsh­ips and lat‐ er her choice of men — her first boyfriend kicked her out of a moving car, leaving her to tumble into a ditch.

"I certainly don't blame my parents for my upbringing," Anderson said in the docu‐ mentary. "I'm grateful be‐ cause I gained a lot of good qualities, along with the bad. I'm a survivor."

Molested by babysitter

Anderson alleges in the film that her babysitter re‐ peatedly molested her as a child, describing three or four years of abuse.

"She always told me not to tell my parents. I tried to pro‐ tect my brother from her, I tried to kill her," Anderson said, describing a moment she tried to stab the babysit‐ ter in the heart with a candy cane pen, telling her she wanted her to die.

LISTEN | How Pamela Anderson and other celebritie­s are reclaiming their own stories:

The babysitter was then killed in a car accident the next day.

"I was sure that I did it, that I wished her dead and she died," Anderson said, adding that she carried the guilt throughout her adoles‐ cence.

Alleges she was raped at age of 12

Anderson alleges she was raped by a 25-year-old man when she was 12 years old.

Anderson kept this a se‐ cret, in fear of feeling like a burden to her family. "I felt like it was my fault," she shared in the documentar­y.

"My mom was always cry‐ ing about my dad, I couldn't bear to hurt her more. I didn't tell her or anyone," she said.

"I tried to forget it, but I felt like it was tattooed on my forehead. Like I had this im‐ age of 'I had sex' on my fore‐ head and I didn't want any‐ one to know that I had it," An‐ derson said, adding that the abuse led her to feel extreme‐ ly shy and self-conscious.

When she arrived at her first Playboy magazine shoot in September 1989, Anderson described feeling as though she had broken free of her paralyzing shyness with the first snap of a camera.

"I'm so sick of all this past that's created this insecurity in me .... It's like a prison, I have to break out of it," she wrote to herself.

"That was the first time I'd felt like I had broken free of something."

Series felt like 'a punch in the stomach'

On Feb. 2, 2022, Pam & Tommy, a limited series cre‐ ated for Hulu, was released on Disney+ professing to de‐ tail the story behind the whirl‐ wind romance between An‐ derson and her rock-star hus‐ band, Tommy Lee, whom she divorced in 1998. The two were robbed of their privacy when a sex tape they made was stolen and illegally dis‐ tributed, becoming the first case of viral content and changing the course of Ander‐ son's career forever.

When the series was re‐ leased, the media were trying to get comments from the former Baywatch star, who is known to have had no in‐ volvement in the project, but she remained silent.

At the time, Anderson was preparing to return to the spotlight for her Broadway debut in Chicago and was ready to move on and find re‐ demption. The series opened up old wounds, she said, and brought to the surface mem‐ ories that she had blocked.

Anderson said when she learned of the show, it felt like "a punch in the stomach."

"This feels like when the tape was stolen," she said. "You are just a thing owned by the world, you belong to the world."

Anderson said that just like the tape, she has no de‐ sire to watch the series.

"Nobody really knows what we were going through at that time," she said. "They should've had to have my permission."

No idea who stole the infamous tape

To this day, Anderson said, she never learned who stole the sex tape that forever changed the course of her ca‐ reer — and she doesn't care to find out.

The safe holding the tape had been stolen during reno‐ vations to the home she shared with Lee, and it could have happened at any point during a six-month period.

"The damage is done," the star said in the documentar­y. "Why would I want to go through that again?"

Anderson and Lee have re‐ fused to make money off of the invasion of privacy that then became what is believed to be the internet's first piece of viral content, all against their will.

"You can't put a monetary

number on the amount of pain and suffering it caused," she said.

At the time of the tape's release, Anderson felt as though she had become a punchline to every joke, and any image she was beginning to build completely deterio‐ rated.

Now, she said she's ready to embrace the past and move forward.

"My life is not a woe-is me story," she said. "I'm not a vic‐ tim. I put myself in crazy situ‐ ations and survived them.

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