Current:Home > reviewsWhy Kendall Jenner Is Comparing Her Life to Hannah Montana -前500条预览:
Why Kendall Jenner Is Comparing Her Life to Hannah Montana
View
Date:2025-04-16 17:10:15
Kendall Jenner has the best of both worlds.
And that’s why the 28-year-old sees the parallels between her and sister Kylie Jenner’s childhood in the public eye with their family’s reality show Keeping Up With the Kardashians and Miley Cyrus’ beloved Disney Channel character.
“It’s a little Hannah Montana-y in a way," Kendall explained on pal Emma Chamberlain’s Anything Goes podcast, admitting, "I didn’t have a disguise, or I didn’t have a physical shift."
Kendall was just 10 when her family's reality show premiered, but she continued to have as normal a childhood as possible.
“We went to school. We went to school as long as we could. I started home school, 11th and 12th grade,” she explained. “So even though we had a TV show at home, we were going to regular school all day and had our friends that we had from before the show started. It wasn’t always easy, but it did feel kind of normal.”
Noting that she and Kylie, 26, had to do “very adult things at a really young age,” Kendall said that she is still “really grateful” for her childhood experiences.
“Overall I am really grateful because I think it could have been a lot worse,” The Kardashians star shared. “I think that Kylie and I, the one thing we had was a lot of stability, a lot of love and a really great support system and really great friends. So it felt like we could remove ourselves a lot of the time and be normal.”
The model added that she and Kylie learned a lot from watching their older sisters Kourtney Kardashian, Kim Kardashian and Khloe Kardashian put their personal lives on display.
As she put it, “There’s also an aspect of us being really grateful that we had older siblings that we got to see do things before us and lead us in a way."
And she’s used them as a guidance when it comes to navigating life in the spotlight, including her high-profile romances with Bad Bunny and Devin Booker. But that’s not to say Kendall is all-in on giving fans access to her life.
"I try [to] find the balance of keeping things private and keeping things sacred, [and] also not letting the unfortunate frustration and stress of everyone trying to get in on it stop me from enjoying my side," she told WSJ. Magazine last year. "I'll go out of my way to do things as privately as possible because I just think that that's the healthier way of dealing with relationships anyway."
Kendall has recently been spotted reconnecting with two of her exes—Bad Bunny and Devin Booker.
After attending the same Met Gala after party as Bad Bunny in the spring, Kendall and the singer also reunited in Paris in June for a dinner with pal Gigi Hadid. The on-off pair were spotted wearing matching gray looks while attending the Vogue World event followed by dinner and a private party.
And while the outing may have gotten the rumor mill buzzing, Kendall kept fans guessing while attending the Paris Olympics. Both Kendall and her ex Devin posted photos from the Bercy Arena where they separately watched the women’s all-around gymnastics final. Each of the exes featured the other in their post without tagging them.
Though Kendall and Bad Bunny called it quits in December 2023, the exes had plenty of cute moments. Read on for more.
After sparking romance rumors in February 2023, Kendall Jenner and Bad Bunny made a joint appearance at the Met Gala after-party in May 2023.
That same month, the duo enjoyed a vacation with friends.
The couple also stepped out for an appearance at a Los Angeles Lakers game on May 12, where they sat courtside...
...shared some LOLs...
...and served up major style.
Speaking of style, the singer and the supermodel sat front row at the Gucci Ancora show during Milan Fashion Week in September 2023.
Three months later, multiple outlets reported that the two had broken up.
The two reunited at the Après Met 2 Met Gala after-party in May 2024.
veryGood! (2933)
Related
- Friday the 13th luck? 13 past Mega Millions jackpot wins in December. See top 10 lottery prizes
- A Baltimore priest has been dismissed over 2018 sexual harassment settlement
- AP Top 25 Takeaways: Oregon-Washington embrace 4-down football; Resetting the Heisman Trophy race
- A $1.4 million speeding ticket surprised a Georgia man before officials clarified the situation
- Moving abroad can be expensive: These 5 countries will 'pay' you to move there
- Love Is Blind Season 5 Reunion's Biggest Bombshells: A Cheating Scandal and Secret Kisses Revealed
- Palestinian mother fears for her children as she wonders about the future after evacuating Gaza City
- The Israeli public finds itself in grief and shock, but many pledge allegiance to war effort
- Moving abroad can be expensive: These 5 countries will 'pay' you to move there
- Piper Laurie, Oscar-nominated actor for The Hustler and Carrie, dies at 91
Ranking
- Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
- French schools hold a moment of silence in an homage to a teacher killed in a knife attack
- Fatal Illinois stabbing of 6-year-old Palestinian refugee alarms feds
- RHONY's Jessel Taank Claps Back at Costars for Criticizing Her Sex Life
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- AP PHOTOS: Scenes of pain and grief on war’s 10th day
- Healthcare workers in California minimum wage to rise to $25 per hour
- Pepper X marks the spot as South Carolina pepper expert scorches his own Guinness Book heat record
Recommendation
US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
Israeli rabbis work around the clock -- even on the Sabbath -- to count the dead from Hamas attack
Israel's U.N. mission hears from families of kidnapped, missing: We want them back. It's all we want.
After her partner's death, Lila Downs records 'La Sánchez,' her most personal album
Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
Israeli rabbis work around the clock -- even on the Sabbath -- to count the dead from Hamas attack
Insurers often shortchange mental health care coverage, despite a federal law
This is how low water levels are on the Mississippi River right now