Candace Cameron Bure’s recent confession has us saying, “Oh My Lanta!”
The 48-year-old recalled one episode that got under her skin while filming the beloved sitcom “Full House,” in which she starred for eight seasons as D.J. Tanner.
On the “Pod Meets World” podcast episode from Aug. 11, co-host Danielle Fishel, from the ‘90s sitcom “Boy Meets World,” asked Candace if she ever had an episode written about her weigh
The “Ainsley McGregor Mysteries” star shared that she did.
“I had that episode where Kimmy [Andrea Barber] and I were going to a pool party, and I didn’t want to put a bathing suit on,” she detailed, “so I did a crash diet to try to lose weight in a week so I wouldn’t feel bad about myself in a bathing suit. And then passed out at the gym because I wasn’t eating and working out.”
The “Candace Cameron Bure Podcast” host added, “Those are things that many of us struggle with, but you know, you play it out on television, and sometimes it’s like, ‘Okay.’”
However, the producers consulted Candace and her parents about the episode’s content to ensure she was comfortable shooting it.
“I was like, ‘Yeah, sure.’ But when you’re in it and doing it, it feels a little awkward,” Candace explained.
“We had wonderful producers who I really did love. They asked my parents first, and then they asked me,” she continued. “They did ask, ‘How would you feel having an episode about getting your period and I was like, ‘No! No!’ And they went, ‘Okay,’ and they didn’t push it.” Meanwhile, in the season after, the “Fuller House” alum lost significant weight, something the series’ producers wanted to highlight.
“I had lost 20 pounds from the end of one season to another,” Candace said. “I came in losing 20 pounds, and they thought it was so great, and they were like, ‘Oh, in the opening titles, why don’t we have you on an exercise bike to promote that.’ And looking back, I don’t think that was bad. I really put a lot of hard work and effort into losing 20 pounds.”
Growing up in the limelight wasn’t always easy for Candace.
“I was always the chubby-cheeked girl, and a lot of people loved that I was,” she shared. “And I can look back and go like, I was just a normal, average girl. And yet you meet people, and they’re always like, ‘You’re so much thinner in person.’ And you’re just like, ‘Is that all people see? Do they just see my chubby cheeks?’”
Something that the “Kind Is the New Classy” author knows all too well can affect a young girl’s mindset.
“Of course, as a teenager, you feel that insecurity whether you’re on television or not,” Candace pointed out. “It gets magnified when you are, so those ages were a little bit more awkward for me.” If she could go back, she would give her younger self one piece of sound advice: “I just want to hug 15-year-old Candace and go, ‘It’s okay don’t listen to anyone.’”
Noting that the “Pod Meets World” hosts, including Rider Strong and Will Friedle, were also in front of the camera at a young age, the actress admitted, “It is weird growing up in front of a camera going through puberty on national television.”
“For better or for worse,” confessed Candace. “There’s really wonderful things, being able to be on a television show and be successful and stuff like that. But it’s just bizarre when everyone sees your first zit. Your boobs coming in —whatever. It’s weird.”