Hayden Panettiere Praises Paris Jackson After Addiction

Hayden Panettiere he throws his support behind Paris Jackson after both women went public about their struggles with addiction.
It appears The Morning Show on Thursday, May 28, Panettiere, 36, was asked if he had anything to do with some of the problems Paris has recently opened up about dealing with.
Paris, who is the daughter of a late pop star Michael Jacksonhe talked about the “bad behavior” he often got involved in when hitting the bottle.
“The behavior is really bad. It’s really bad in a moral way, because I was raised to be kind – and not nice,” said Paris, 28, during Tuesday, May 26. Jack Osbourne‘s “Attempting Immortality” podcast. “I can say a**t about being nice – but being kind and looking people in the eye and asking the waiter their name so you can write it down on the receipt later, just little things, like, how do you treat people?”
Paris added, “What happens when I drink goes away. That goes out the window and I become a vindictive person.”
I Heroes alum praised Paris for her comments and how she has dealt with her struggles thus far.
“I actually just saw Paris and she’s an amazing, incredibly strong person. To see someone who has battled addiction and succeeded – she’s a strong, beautiful person,” Panettiere said. The Morning Show.
He added, “And you can imagine… I mean growing up with a family the way he has and as you know now, putting his music out there, it’s just… I’m proud of him.”

Hayden Panettiere.
(Photo by Trae Patton/NBC/NBCUniversal via Getty Images)I Nashville the star fought his demons. In his new memoir, It’s Me: CountingPanettiere shared details of her battle with addiction and her experience in rehab.
Talking to Us Weekly to promote the book earlier this month, Panettiere explained how eight months of rehab — his third stint — helped him find himself again.
“It was time. I finally had time to stay in therapy and let my brain relax and rewire itself and a lot of that is just time. I’ve never been in therapy that long,” he said. Us. I’m going to do this little jump and little by little. And I remember getting to about eight months and saying, ‘Oh my gosh, now I know what they mean when they say “you’re over the hump.”‘”
He continued, “Even though it takes patience and you hit walls, and there’s nothing easy about it, it’s so worth it.





