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Cosmopolitan

Abby Lee Miller’s New Show Gets Canceled as Her Racism on ‘Dance Moms’ Is Revealed

Mehera Bonner
4 min read
Photo credit: Steven Ferdman - Getty Images
Photo credit: Steven Ferdman - Getty Images

From Cosmopolitan


Abby Lee Miller’s new Lifetime show has been pulled after her racist comments during Dance Moms were revealed. Abby’s Virtual Dance Off was announced back in April and was meant to be a competition series that took place at home during coronavirus self-isolation measures. The show was supposed to air 12 episodes this summer, but according to Entertainment Weekly, it’s been canceled as a result of Miller’s racism. She also will no longer be on Dance Moms itself, if it even gets renewed.

As a reminder, Miller shared a since-deleted #BlackoutTuesday post on Instagram, which resulted in her being called out for racist comments she made to several moms and their daughters. Dance Moms’ Adriana Smith responded directly to Miller’s post with her own Instagram, writing, “I couldn’t think of a more perfect day to address my experience with Abby Lee Miller. Wanna know the truth? Wanna know my TRUTH?”

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She went on to chronicle some despicable things Miller said to her, including, “I know you grew up in the HOOD with only a box of 8 crayons, but I grew up in the Country Club with a box of 64—don’t be stupid.”

Meanwhile, Camille Bridges wrote a statement to E! News, saying, “[Miller] tried to spin Camryn as being the poor one and there on scholarship. I shut that down immediately. She loves appropriating our culture and never appreciating it. She did not give Black choreographers on the show acknowledgment of their work. She continuously put Camryn in Afros.”

Miller has since apologized, but Smith is understandably not accepting said apology because Miller hasn’t even bothered to reach out directly: “Her failure to appropriately address me and my daughter personally points to the fact that she is disingenuous,” Smith says. “I firmly believe that if Abby was truly sorry, she would have apologized a year ago when she exposed my then-7-year-old daughter to her FIRST account of racism.”


Here are guides for how to demand justice right now, how to find mental health resources if you’re a Black woman, how to talk to your relatives about Black Lives Matter, how to spot a fake protest story, and how to protest safely.

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