TV Pedophiles on set, sexism in the writers' room: Everything said about Nickelodeon on Quiet on Set The new ID docuseries revealed numerous troubling details about the kids TV network during Dan Schneider's tenure. By Wesley Stenzel Updated on March 18, 2024 10:00PM EDT Investigation Discovery's Quiet on Set: The Dark Side of Kids TV drops a number of disconcerting bombs about the workplace culture at Nickelodeon during the 1990s, 2000s, and 2010s. The docuseries (streaming on ID now) examines the toxic environment at Nick during the reign of megaproducer Dan Schneider, who created and executive produced hit series like The Amanda Show, Drake & Josh, iCarly, and Zoey 101. Schneider and Nickelodeon parted ways in 2018 after a two-decade working relationship, following a ViacomCBS investigation that determined no evidence of sexual misconduct but concluded that Schneider was verbally abusive on set, per a 2021 report by The New York Times. Schneider denied all allegations of misconduct. “I couldn’t and I wouldn’t have the long-term friendships and continued loyalty from so many reputable people if I’d mistreated my actors of any age, especially minors," he told the outlet at the time. Dan Schneider. Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic Nickelodeon offered the following statement to EW about the documentary: “Though we cannot corroborate or negate allegations of behaviors from productions decades ago, Nickelodeon as a matter of policy investigates all formal complaints as part of our commitment to fostering a safe and professional workplace environment free of harassment or other kinds of inappropriate conduct. Our highest priorities are the well-being and best interests not just of our employees, casts and crew, but of all children, and we have adopted numerous safeguards over the years to help ensure we are living up to our own high standards and the expectations of our audience.” A spokesperson for Schneider shared the following statement with EW: “Dan expected and asked a lot from his teams. They worked long hours and consistently made successful shows. In the challenges of production, Dan could get frustrated at times, and he understands why some employees found that intimidating or stressful. In a career spanning 30+ years, Dan worked with thousands of people, many of whom still tell him how much they enjoyed and appreciated working on his shows. But he also knows some people did not have a positive experience, and he is truly sorry for that.” The first two eps feature interviews with a number of former cast members from All That and the Amanda Bynes-led spinoff series, The Amanda Show, including Leon Frierson, Katrina Johnson, Raquel Lee Bolleau, Giovonnie Samuels, Kyle Sullivan, and Bryan Christopher Hearne, who all share about experiences that range from strange to downright terrifying. The third and fourth episodes also have on-camera appearances from Drake Bell and Zoey 101 actress Alexa Nikolas. Below are the major allegations from the complete series Quiet on Set: The Dark Side of Kids TV. Photo Illustration of the cast of "All That", Drake Bell, Dan Schneider, Brian Peck, and Amanda Bynes. Photos: "All That" cast: Tollin/Robbins Prod./Everett; Bell: Michael Tran/Getty; Schneider: Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic; Peck: Albert L. Ortega/Getty Images; Bynes: Michael Yarish/Nickelodeon Network/Everett - Photo Illustration: Chuck Kerr A production assistant was self-proclaimed pedophile Perhaps the most disturbing section of this half of Quiet on Set discusses Jason Handy, a production assistant on All That and The Amanda Show in the early 2000s. Parents and kids alike thought Handy was a friendly, helpful presence on set, and didn’t think twice when he asked to exchange email addresses and phone numbers. “You thought, ‘Oh, I could be friends with this person,’” said MJ, the mother of former Amanda Show performer identified as Brandi. MJ’s perspective changed when her 11-year-old daughter had a mortified reaction to an email from Handy. “It was a picture of him naked masturbating, and he said he had sent it to her because he wanted her to see that he was thinking of her,” MJ said. Brandi left the entertainment industry after the email, and was one of the few victims who cooperated with the eventual investigation. Handy was arrested in April 2003 after law enforcement received a tip about him, and the docuseries said that when police investigated his home, they found over 10,000 images of children and over 1,700 images of young girls in erotic poses, as well as seven videos on CD files of children engaged in sexually explicit conduct. The doc also claimed that in Handy’s personal diary, he wrote sentences like “I am a pedophile, full blown,” “I really have been giving into my desire for little girls these past few weeks,” and “I even struggle on a day-to-day basis of how I can find a victim to rape if I have to.” Another one of Handy’s victims — a young guest star on Cousin Skeeter on Nick — was assaulted by the PA at her home in 2000. He told her not to tell her mother, and told her that he could get her jobs on other shows. In 2004, per the Los Angeles Times, Handy was sentenced to six years in prison after being convicted on two felony counts, one of lewd acts on a child and one of distributing sexually explicit material by email, as well as on a misdemeanor charge related to sexual exploitation of a child. “I no longer trusted anybody with children in this industry,” MJ said. “I felt abandoned. There was never any apology to Brandi herself for what happened. Everything got swept under the rug.” The only two women writers on The Amanda Show’s first season allege they experienced sexual harassment Amanda Bynes on 'The Amanda Show'. Nickelodeon Network / Courtesy Everett Collection Two key subjects in the documentary, Jenny Kilgen and Christy Stratton, who were interviewed separately, described their experiences as the only two women writers during the first season of The Amanda Show. Kilgen and Stratton described patterns of allegedly distressing behavior from Dan Schneider in the workplace. They claim early meetings with Schneider also suggested that gender-related issues might persist. “It was early on when we first started when Dan said he didn’t think women were funny,” Stratton recalled. “He said women can’t write funny,” Kilgen said. “He challenged us to name a funny female writer, and he said this to the writers in the writers’ room. And that was my first indication of trouble. That maybe this guy didn’t really value women in the writers’ room. And later, he had said that, ‘Hey, do you mind if I refer to you and Christy as “the girls?”’...and we both were like ‘no.’ And he said ‘oh, good, because I can’t stand girls that are uptight about things like that.’ And when he said that, I knew that next time this guy asks me if I mind something, there’s a right and wrong answer, and thank God I answered right.” Stratton later described an incident in which Schneider allegedly challenged her to eat an obscene amount of ice cream in a limited time period for a $200 prize, and said that when she casually reminded him that he hadn’t paid her for completing the task, he lashed out. “Dan got worse and worse as the season got on,” Kilgen said. “Because I was a first-time writer, I didn’t know what was acceptable and not acceptable. And so Christy and I both did things that were uncomfortable.” She alleged in the doc that Schneider showed her porn and asked for massages, saying, “Dan was showing pornography on his computer screen. He asked me several times to massage him in the writers’ room and in the studio, and he would say things sometimes like ‘Kim, please give me a massage, I’ll put one of your sketches in the show.’ And he would always present it like a joke, and he would be laughing while he said it. But you always felt like disagreeing with Dan or standing up for yourself could result in you getting fired.” A spokesperson for Schneider told EW, “Dan deeply regrets asking anyone for neck massages. Though they happened in public settings, he knows this was highly inappropriate and would never happen again.” Dan Schneider. Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic The most explicit incident of alleged sexual harassment came later. “Christy was talking about high school, which is relevant because we’re writing for a young girl,” Kilgen recalled. “And Dan just said, ‘You know what’d be funny? If you leaned over the table, and acted like you were being sodomized and told that story about high school.’ She said no at first, and then he was kind of like, ‘Oh, c’mon, c’mon, it’d be so funny just do it, it’d be so funny.’ And everyone’s kind of laughing too, ‘cause he’s making it this big joke. She couldn’t get out of it, he’s begging her. So she just leaned over the table and did what he asked her to do.” Stratton did not want to go into detail when asked about the incident herself. "I’d rather not. I don’t wanna talk about that," she said. "Thinking about it now, yeah, it’s like, oh boy. I just think about that poor girl and what she had to go through. And I would not do that today, but I did it then." Additionally, Stratton claimed the two women were asked to “split a salary” when they were initially hired. "I remember speaking to the line producer, and she said that I was going to have to split a salary with a writer that I did not know," Stratton recalled. Kilgen alleged that Schneider called to threaten her after she reported what she called an illegal split salary to the Writers Guild of America, but she still returned for the second season. However, she said she only lasted four days, as she alleged that Schneider called her into his office and repeatedly asked her if she had ever performed phone sex. She left distraught, quit the job, and sued Schneider. “I hired a lawyer and started blowing whistles,” she said, and also claimed that her lawsuit led to internal investigations at Nickelodeon. A spokesperson for Schneider told EW, “The Amanda Show was produced by a different company (Tollin/Robbins) not Dan. Additionally, Dan was not involved in writers’ salaries, they were controlled by the network and also by the WGA, not by Dan even on shows he did create. However, unfortunately writers' rooms were often off-color places, especially more than 20 years ago. Dan is extremely sorry for his behavior that contributed to that environment and he has grown a lot since then. That behavior is clearly wrong and not for the workplace, and certainly he would never act that way again.” Young cast members say they were frequently subjected to uncomfortable situations on set Cast members from 'All That'. Gregg DeGuire/WireImage Multiple former cast members from All That — the teen sketch series starring Kenan Thompson, Kel Mitchell, Lori Beth Denberg, and Amanda Bynes — and The Amanda Show, said that they were pressured to perform in off-putting sketches that featured suggestive and/or racially insensitive humor. “The show is full of these weird, uncomfortable sketches,” said All That cast member Kyle Sullivan. “I think Dan got a kick out of walking a line with that.” One particularly distressing incident came when All That’s Bryan Christopher Hearne was asked to play a rapper. “There was a sketch where I played the youngest rapper of all time, Lil Fetus,” Hearne said. “They were fitting me for the Lil Fetus role. And essentially, you’re a fetus, so you nekked, but you know they had to put a body suit on me, and obviously it has to be skin tone. Someone said, ‘The skin tone should be charcoal.’ I started to get teary eyed. Whoever was doing my makeup at the time was kinda like, hand on my shoulder, like ‘It’s gonna be okay.’” Hearne’s mother Tracey Brown also shared negative memories of the show. “They set up the scene like [Bryan] was selling drugs,” she recalled. “And I was like, ‘Oh, the Black kid gets to be the crack dealer?’ And we were at the end of the scene and there was a man sitting there who was the producer. Behind him was a young lady massaging him. Why were you having adult jokes? Are you showing the kids that Hollywood is a casting couch?” Leon Frierson also reported feeling uncomfortable with certain sketches. “There’s a new character for me on All That named Nose Boy,” he recalled. “Naturally, I’m in a superhero costume, which is just tights and underwear. What was different about this: they gave me a prosthetic nose, like an enlarged nose, and they put this same nose on the costume. You can’t help but notice that it looks like penis and testicles on my shoulders.” Perhaps the most unpleasant moments on set, though, came on the Fear Factor-inspired series On-Air Dares. “I did the peanut butter one, so I had to be submerged in peanut butter,” Hearne said. “That was weird, but then the dogs come. I’m laying on the ground and the dogs, they gotta lick peanut butter off my body. That sounds like some kinda awkward fantasy from some freaky dude. It was really uncomfortable. I didn’t like that.” “Those were particularly traumatic, and they were sort of designed to be,” Sullivan confirmed. “There was sort of this weird dynamic with it, where they were taking something that exists in an adult context like Fear Factor, and like transmogrifying it into kids. When you do that, it’s actually like an inappropriate thing to do.” “The thing that was most uncomfortable was having to watch your fellow castmates be, essentially, tortured,” Hearne said. “If there’s anything on set that I wish I could’ve yelled ‘Stop, let’s not do this. I’m out,’ it’s the On-Air Dares.” In a statement to EW made via Schneider's team, Russell Hicks, former president of content and production at Nickelodeon, said, “Dan Schneider is one of the most prolific producers of hit television in the kids and family entertainment business. Dan’s shows transcend children's television and are staples on many streaming platforms today, enjoyed by both kids and their parents. Dan cared about the kids on his shows even when sometimes their own families unfortunately did not.” Hicks added, “Every single thing that Dan ever did on any of his shows was carefully scrutinized and approved by executives at Nickelodeon.” A spokesperson for Schneider told EW, “Everything that happened on the shows Dan ran was carefully scrutinized by dozens of involved adults, and approved by the network. If there was an actual problem with the scenes that some people, now years later are ‘sexualizing’, they would be taken down, but they are not, they are aired constantly all over the world today still, enjoyed by both kids and parents. “ “Remember, all stories, dialogue, costumes, and makeup were fully approved by network executives on two coasts,” the statement continues. “A standards and practices group read and ultimately approved every script, and programming executives reviewed and approved all episodes. In addition, every day on every set, there were always parents and caregivers and their friends watching filming and rehearsals. Had there been any scenes or outfits that were inappropriate in any way, they would have been flagged and blocked by this multilayered scrutiny.” “Unfortunately, some adults project their adult minds onto kids' shows, drawing false conclusions about them,” the statement concludes. Crew member Brian Peck made questionable impressions before his 2003 arrest for sexual abuse Brian Peck. Albert L. Ortega/Getty Images Dialogue coach Brian Peck, who worked on All That and The Amanda Show, was arrested in 2003 for child sexual abuse and later convicted. Before that, he was generally well-regarded on set, but one of his prized possessions raised some eyebrows. “Everyone went to Brian’s house for a barbecue, and his house was a little off,” Sullivan remembered. “He had a room that was just dedicated to vintage toys and comic books, and he’d converted his garage into like a Planet of the Apes shrine. “I noticed a painting in the room that stuck out to me because it had nothing to do with Planet of the Apes,” he continued. “It was of a birthday clown holding balloons. And Brian got very excited when I asked him about it, he flipped the thing around, and on the back it said, ‘To Brian, I hope you enjoy the painting. Best wishes, your friend John Wayne Gacy.’ It was a self-portrait of serial killer John Wayne Gacy.” “At this point, I’m like 14, I didn’t know the details, but I knew, like, this guy’s [expletive] serial killer who killed a lot of young men and boys,” Sullivan said. “My instinct was like, ‘Everyone has to see this.’ And so all the parents and the kids come in the room, and then Brian presents the painting again. And Brian actually developed a pen pal relationship with John. He kept this pile of letters and photos from John Wayne Gacy in his nightstand next to his bed. And pulls them out, and starts showing them to me.” The documentary did not provide further confirmation of Peck and Gacy’s relationship. EW has not been able to reach Peck for comment. Dan Schneider’s temperament troubled cast and crew members Dan Schneider. Lawrence K. Ho/Los Angeles Times via Getty Cast and crew members alleged that Schneider’s behavior led to a tense environment on set. “Dan would come down and yell and scream. There was many times where I had to go ‘Okay. You’re creating an atmosphere on this set that is not healthy,’” said Amanda Show director Virgil Fabian. “He was just an egomaniac. You know, when everybody is just kissing your butt, and the money's crazy, how do you avoid that? I don’t know how you avoid that.” “Dan’s presence in a room could change the vibe of the room,” Hearne confirmed. “Everybody would kinda just be like ‘Okay. Shut up. Shut up.’” A spokesperson for Schneider shared the following statement with EW: “Dan expected and asked a lot from his teams. They worked long hours and consistently made successful shows. In the challenges of production, Dan could get frustrated at times, and he understands why some employees found that intimidating or stressful. In a career spanning 30+ years, Dan worked with thousands of people, many of whom still tell him how much they enjoyed and appreciated working on his shows. But he also knows some people did not have a positive experience, and he is truly sorry for that.” Multiple cast and crew members in the doc also referenced Schneider’s close relationship with Bynes, who was 13 when The Amanda Show debuted. “I definitely saw Amanda being very close physically with Dan,” editor Karyn Finley Thompson stated, alleging, “There were many times that I saw Amanda sitting behind him hugging him, or like giving him a neck massage or whatever. Dan and Amanda had a close relationship, and I didn’t think anything different than that.” Schneider’s spokesperson did not directly address his relationship with Bynes, but did note that “Dan deeply regrets asking anyone for neck massages. Though they happened in public settings, he knows this was highly inappropriate and would never happen again.” Drake Bell was repeatedly sexually abused by dialogue coach Brian Peck as a teenager Drake Bell. Gary Livingston/Getty The biggest revelation from the second half of the documentary came with Drake Bell’s accounts of the abuse he survived as a teenager that later led to his abuser’s conviction. Bell shared that dialogue coach Brian Peck, whom he worked with as a cast member of The Amanda Show, manipulated the teen star into severing ties with his father/manager and said Peck integrated himself into multiple areas of Bell’s life, eventually convincing his mother to let the teen star stay at Peck's house between auditions. “I was sleeping on the couch where I would usually sleep, and I woke up to him — I opened my eyes, I woke up, and he was, he was sexually assaulting me,” Bell described of the first instance of abuse. “And I froze and was in complete shock, and had no idea what to do, or how to react. And I had no idea how to get out of the situation. What am I [gonna do], call my mom and be like ‘Hey, this just happened, can you come pick me up? I’ll just sit here and wait.’ I had no car, I didn’t drive. I was 15 at this time.” Bell said the abuse persisted until he began spending more time at a girlfriend’s house. The former Drake & Josh actor stated that his girlfriend’s mother realized something wasn’t right when Peck repeatedly called Bell at her home, and she took the actor to her family therapist. Later, Bell eventually detailed the abuse to his own mother, who called the police. “The investigation was pretty brutal,” he said. “I had to be excruciatingly detailed about every single thing, time that it had happened with two absolute strangers. The worst part was I had to make a phone call to Brian and get him to admit what he’d done.” Bell said that on the call, he said, “I’m really struggling with this stuff now, and I’m so torn up, I’m so broken, I can’t, I’m so emotionally distressed right now. Why did this happen?” which led Peck to break into “a full-on confession” that led to his arrest. Peck was convicted of child molestation in 2004, pleading no contest to a charge of oral copulation with a minor under 16 and a charge of performing a lewd act with a 14- or 15-year-old, though his victim’s identity was not made public at the time. He was also ordered to register as a sex offender. Nickelodeon offered the following statement about the case to EW: “Now that Drake Bell has disclosed his identity as the plaintiff in the 2004 case, we are dismayed and saddened to learn of the trauma he has endured, and we commend and support the strength required to come forward.” Numerous celebrities wrote letters of support for convicted child molester Brian Peck James Marsden and Alan Thicke. Jon Kopaloff/Getty;Phillip Chin/WireImage Before Peck was sentenced in 2004 for sexually abusing then-unidentified Bell, numerous prominent figures in the entertainment industry wrote letters of support vouching for his character. The documentary petitioned the court to unseal documents relating to Peck’s case, and disclosed the identities of these letter writers for the first time. James Marsden, Taran Killam, Growing Pains stars Alan Thicke and Joanna Kerns, Twin Peaks actress Kimmy Robertson, Boy Meets World actors Will Friedle and Rider Strong, American Horror Story actor Ron Melendez, and Amanda Show director Rich Correll all wrote letters of support for Peck. Some of these figures, including Friedle and Strong, have since expressed their regret over writing the letters and stated that they were manipulated by Peck’s misinformation. Additionally, many of these entertainers also met Peck when they were teenagers. Reps for Marsden, Killam, Robertson, Kerns, Friedle, Strong, Melendez, and Correll did not immediately respond to EW’s request for comment. Another pedophile worked at Nickelodeon in the 2000s Ezel Channel, a Nickelodeon employee who worked on the company’s Burbank lot, was convicted of bringing an underage boy to the lot and abusing him there. If that’s not disturbing enough, Channel had a prior conviction and was a registered sex offender but was still allowed to work at Nickelodeon. The doc doesn’t go into detail about Channel as it does with Handy and Peck, but noted that Nickelodeon employing three child abusers during the same era is distressing. Drake Bell acknowledged allegations against himself Drake Bell. Michael Tran/Getty In the final episode, Bell reflected on his struggles after the conclusion of the Peck trial, which included “DUIs [and] behaviors that were happening because I was lost,” as the actor put it in the doc. “Right after Drake & Josh, I was signed, and then I released my second album. I made some really cool movies, but I would have stints of sobriety, and then I would, you know — the pressure would be too much, and all of these demons that I had were very difficult to work through,” he described. “And so I think a lot of my self-destructive behavior would always just be a temporary fix, and it [would] always creep back up. I went through this bankruptcy and lost my house. I mean, it was absolutely devastating.” “There was definitely a slow decline in my mental health and sobriety,” Bell continued. The doc noted that although Bell pleaded guilty to charges related to inappropriate text messages he sent to a minor, the actor was not charged for doing anything physical. In 2021, Bell was sentenced to two years of probation and 200 hours of community service for felony attempted endangering children and a misdemeanor charge of disseminating matter harmful to juveniles. The victim, who was 15 at the time, also accused him of sexual misconduct, but his attorney and Bell himself disputed those allegations, and insisted at the time that the contact included only text messages, not photos, and nothing sexual in nature. “I took responsibility for that, you know, I did what was asked of me, but the media grabbed ahold of so much misinformation, and it absolutely destroyed me,” Bell said of the attempted child endangerment case. “And I started to spin out of control. If I had continued down that path, that could very likely be the end of my story.” Bell said that his trajectory changed once he sought help. “I was at rock bottom, and so I checked into treatment, and I got to go through a lot of trauma therapy, a lot of grief therapy, and be surrounded by people who, for the first time in a long time, wanted to just see me get better,” he said. Bell was also accused of physical and verbal abuse by an ex-girlfriend in 2020. He denied those allegations at the time, but there is no explicit mention of them in the documentary. Every child actor interviewed reported mental health, self-esteem, and/or substance abuse issues Alexa Nikolas. getty Frierson, Johnson, Bolleau, Samuels, Sullivan, Hearne, and Nikolas all expressed that their time as child performers on Nickelodeon shows was not a net positive for their mental health and self-esteem. “Being a child star hurt me mentally and somewhat physically,” Frierson said. “The alcoholism that I’ve dealt with, I believe is a direct connection to the feelings that I have after leaving the industry and not being able to maintain the success that I had.” “After All That, I was burned out, and I was excited for the next chapter, and I was excited to maybe try college,” Johnson recalled. “Being normal a little bit. But not everybody gets to be normal afterwards. Because you don’t know that that looks like.” “Being let go from The Amanda Show really broke my confidence, big time,” Bolleau stated. “That was a very young lesson to learn in my career, is that everyone is replaceable. And it sent me down a really dark path. I had to really pick myself back up and keep it moving in an industry that showed me very early on that it has no love for me at all.” Giovonnie Samuels. Araya Doheny/WireImage Samuels expressed similar sentiments. “I struggled with self-esteem issues, I struggled with beauty standards cuz I didn’t feel accepted,” she said. Sullivan said that his time at Nickelodeon gave him trust issues. “It was a toxic environment, and seeing how the show just kept on rolling, and these people who were criminals were disappeared, it made me quite cynical about the reality of power dynamics, and it made me trust people less,” he said. “There’s a dark underbelly to child stardom,” Hearne said. “Children are just a dollar sign when they show up on set. Nobody’s taking anyone’s mental health serious, and that’s completely unfortunate.” “Towards the end of season 2 of Zoey 101, I wasn’t happy,” Nikolas explained. “I actually could not show up to set anymore without crying. A lot of my self-worth was deeply damaged from that set experience. Me as a person was altered for life.” Dan Schneider left Nickelodeon in 2018 following the #MeToo movement Dan Schneider. Eric Vitale/Getty The documentary stated that in the mid-2010s, Nickelodeon launched an internal investigation because there were concerns about the atmosphere on the set of Sam & Cat, and alleged that after the investigation, Schneider was effectively barred from interacting with the cast despite still being the showrunner. The doc then displayed text that read “Dan Schneider says he was not barred from working with the actors but chose to give notes from his office.” After the #MeToo movement made waves in Hollywood in 2017, an anonymous costumer on one of Schneider’s shows said that she was emboldened to speak up about the dynamic on set. “I decided I’d had enough when the MeToo movement made it okay to talk about hostile work environments,” the costumer, whose face is not shown, said in the doc. “I felt like I could finally call up my union and let them know that there had been some stuff going on that, it was inappropriate,” she said, alleging that Schneider “asked for massages from females weekly, if not daily. And this is not right, something has to be done.” She claimed her union rep told her she “wasn’t the only one who had shown my shock and displeasure that this was allowed to go on. And that they were looking into it.” A spokesperson for Schneider told EW, “Dan deeply regrets asking anyone for neck massages. Though they happened in public settings, he knows this was highly inappropriate and would never happen again.” The doc noted that Nickelodeon launched another investigation into Schneider’s behavior around this time, and although no evidence was found of sexual abuse or inappropriate relationships with children, it did find that Schneider had been abusive in the workplace, as was previously made public. Dan Schneider. Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic Schneider ultimately parted ways with Nickelodeon in March 2018, though he denied that it was due to the investigation. “Dan Schneider stated this is not an accurate description of why he and Nickelodeon parted ways,” read text in the doc. “However, he stated that today, ‘I would absolutely do some things differently. I’ve learned a lot over the years about how to be a better boss.’” The doc ended with the following text: “Dan Schneider says: ‘Everything that happened on the shows I ran was carefully scrutinized by dozens of involved adults. All stories, dialogue, costumes, and makeup were fully approved by network executives on two coasts. A standards and practices group read and ultimately approved every script, and programming executives reviewed and approved all episodes. In addition, every day on every set, there were always parents and caregivers and their friends watching us rehearse and film.’” Additionally, each episode of the docuseries ended with the text: “In response to producers’ questions, Nickelodeon has stated it ‘investigates all formal complaints as part of our commitment to fostering a safe and professional workplace… [W]e have adopted numerous safeguards over the years to help ensure we are living up to our own high standards and the expectations of our audience.’” All episodes of Quiet on Set: The Dark Side of Kids TV are available on ID now. If you or someone you know has been a victim of sexual abuse, text "STRENGTH" to the Crisis Text Line at 741-741 to be connected to a certified crisis counselor. Sign up for Entertainment Weekly's free daily newsletter to get breaking TV news, exclusive first looks, recaps, reviews, interviews with your favorite stars, and more. 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