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Josh Peck, Nancy Sullivan, and More React to Nickelodeon Doc

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Drake & Josh cast members.
Photo: Albert L. Ortega/WireImage

Nickelodeon stars are reacting to Investigation Discovery’s harrowing docuseries, Quiet on Set: The Dark Side of Kids TV. In the midst of revelations that a dialogue coach sexually abused Drake Bell and allegations that producer Dan Schneider wrote lewd jokes for child actors to perform, former Nickelodeon stars have shared messages of support to survivors or have apologized (twice now) for mocking survivors’ experiences. The four-part series zeroes in on the network, tracking child abuse at the hands of crew members, the sexual innuendos in Schneider’s shows, and accusations that the producer fostered toxic work environments on his many productions. It also focuses on Bell, who, in on-camera interviews, discloses that he had been repeatedly sexually assaulted by his dialogue coach, Brian Peck, while working at the network. All That and The Amanda Show actors also shared their discomfort on sets along with Alexa Nikolas, who previously spoke about her experience in a 2022 exposé of Schneider.

Amid the abuse revelations, Nickelodeon colleague Devon Werkheiser, star of Ned’s Declassified School Survival Guide, initially mocked Bell’s testimony in a TikTok, only to later apologize for his actions. Below, what the network’s stars have said about Quiet on Set so far.

Bell’s Drake & Josh co-star shared an Instagram post addressing the revelations on March 21. “I finished the Quiet on Set documentary and took a few days to process,” Josh Peck wrote. “I reached out to Drake privately, but want to give my support for the survivors who were brave enough to share their stories of emotional and physical abuse on Nickelodeon sets with the world. Children should be protected.” He added that he hopes “it can bring healing” for the victims and a “necessary change” to the industry.

In his first interview after the documentary aired, Bell spoke with Sarah Fraser on The Sarah Fraser Show about his reaction to Nickelodeon’s response to Quiet on Set. “There’s a very well-tailored response saying, ‘Learning about his trauma,’ because they couldn’t say that they didn’t know about this or what had happened, or anything. So I think that was a really well-tailored response by probably some big attorney in Hollywood,” he explained. “I have to pay for my own therapy, I have to figure out what — I mean if there was anything, if there was any truth behind them actually caring, there would be something more than quotes on a page by obviously a legal representative telling them exactly how to tailor a response.” Bell also revealed he checked himself back into rehab after meeting with producers.

Bell also felt “cautious about involving” his father in the documentary, explaining, “I’m sure that my dad puts a lot of blame on himself, you know? And I thought that this might be an opportunity for him to realize that, you know, that it’s one person’s fault.”

Sullivan, who played Bell’s onscreen mom in Drake & Josh, sent a message of support on Instagram. “They weren’t my real kids, but I’ll always love them,” Sullivan captioned a photo of teenage Bell. “It broke my heart into a million pieces to hear just how much Drake was holding inside while we were working together. I was both devastated and proud seeing the man he’s grown into sit down on camera and bravely tell his truth.” Her message ends with the hope that “memories of the joy he had on our shows will someday greatly overshadow the pain” before “sending love” to the actor.

The hosts of Ned’s Declassified Podcast Survival Guide, who were child actors on the Nickelodeon show Ned’s Declassified School Survival Guide, apologized for appearing to mock the abuse Bell faced earlier this week. “We fucked up,” Devon Werkheiser said on the podcast on March 22. Co-host Daniel Curtis Lee said “yeah, absolutely” in agreement. “Now, having seen the documentary, it’s disturbing,” Werkheiser added, “Now we’ve watched it, and I get it. If I had just watched especially that third episode and then watched us joking like that … I would be like, ‘Are they sociopaths? Is something wrong with them?’” Elsewhere on the episode, Werkheiser described how he felt gutted when Bell re-posted the clip where he joked about the abuse. “I have to say, when I saw our little fucking TikTok clip and that Drake had retweeted it, I was just watching his interview [in Quiet on Set]. And someone sent me that he had retweeted it, and then I saw the clip and like … I put out a fucking apology immediately. I felt like a piece of shit,” he admitted. Declassified star and podcast co-host Lindsey Shaw simply said, “I am sorry.”

It was a TikTok livestream on March 18 where Werkheiser joked about the abuse revelations with Shaw and Lee. “Daniel, we told you never to speak about that,” he told his co-host during the livestream. “Get back in your hole, Daniel, and give me your holes!” He tried to pull himself together on the livestream, saying, “Sorry, we shouldn’t joke about this. We really shouldn’t. Our set was not like that.” The following day, Werkheiser addressed his behavior on Twitter. “I feel horrible that my dumbass was even speaking about this without seeing it,” he wrote. “I watched Quiet on Set tonight and am horrified by the gravity of what Drake and others shared.”

Following Dan Schneider’s response to Quiet on Set, Nikolas, who participated in the documentary, spoke out against the producer’s comments. In a video posted to the YouTube channel for Eat Predators, her movement created to end predatory behavior in Hollywood, Nikolas said, “I’m sorry, him centering what he feels is bizarre to me. It’s like you literally… you are awful! To be quite honest with you, awful. You’re embarrassed? Not embarrassed enough! Not embarrassed enough to go reach out to the people you actually harmed.” She went on to add, “I’m going to cut to the chase here: you don’t feel anything, Dan. You have no idea what accountability is. You’re searching for it, maybe, but you haven’t landed on it. That’s for sure. This is not the way.”

Salvatore, who played Mark Del Figgalo on Zoey 101 and worked in the writers’ room of Sam & Cat and Victorious, posted a video to his Instagram following the release of the documentary. “We could talk about the massages. We could talk about the fact that [Dan Schneider] would literally count his gold coin collection in front of his crew who was living paycheck to paycheck. We could talk about how sometimes he would bring out his shotgun to scare one of the writers when they were working at his house,” Salvatore said, before adding, “But what I do want to talk about is never letting this stuff happen again. This is an entire industry built on hope and dreams and adrenaline and wish fulfillment, and that can be a very dangerous thing for megalomaniacs to wield.” Salvatore continued on to say that despite worries that speaking out could impact his career, his silence would perpetuate this kind of behavior. “And until [Schneider] goes on 60 Minutes to answer some questions from some real journalists and not a cast member of his that he’s paying to be there…apology not accepted.”

This post has been updated.



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