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Peter Andre reveals he was 'very strict' about what his daughter Princess could include in her ITV series as he admits he's found it hard to 'let go' of her amid feud with ex Katie Price

Peter Andre reveals he was 'very strict' about what his daughter Princess could include in her ITV series as he admits he's found it hard to 'let go' of her amid feud with ex Katie Price

Daily Mail​2 days ago
Peter Andre has spoken about his daughter Princess foray into the TV world for the first time, admitting he was 'very strict' about what she could feature in her new ITV2 reality show.
The influencer, 18, was praised by viewers for her four-part show The Princess Diaries, where she offered insight into her 'chaotic' childhood as the daughter of the Mysterious Girl hitmaker, and his ex Katie Price.
Speaking to Daily Mail ahead of his new Channel 5 series The Sunshine Murders, Peter, 52, said he was wary of letting Princess appear on TV before she 'got to an age where she could do it herself'.
The father-of-five added that he's found it hard to 'let go' of his eldest daughter after she turned 18 earlier this year.
It came as Katie hit back at her ex Peter after he issued a statement accused her of peddling 'baseless lies' over the last 16 years.
He said: 'I was very strict about what she wasn't allowed to, you know, I didn't want didn't really want her doing a lot of stuff before she got to the age that she can do it herself.
'I'm really proud of her. I think she's a really sweet person and I really hope people see that of her and I just want her to shine and, you know, I want her to just go on and just become her own little true gem.
'She's a great girl and I'm proud of her and I'm proud of Junior too. He's such a good, good kid.'
Peter went onto share he's had to 'let go of the reins' as Princess reached adulthood, admitting he was a 'strict' parent during their upbringing.
He told Daily Mail: 'This is the hard bit, because I have to be honest, trying to cut that umbilical cord at 18, some people let go [more easily].
'I know I had to let go of the reins a bit, and that it was not easy. It's scary because it's still your baby.
'They still say things that they've said when they were 10 or 1, like, they might be grown up in actual age, but they're still your baby.
'And yeah, OK, I could have been considered a bit of a strict dad, but I think I'm all right now. I'm, I'm chilled out a lot more now.
'But of course, I just wanted to be safe and, you know, you try and keep the innocence as long as you can with them, and then, you just got to realise that they've got to live life.'
Katie responded to Peter 's bombshell statement with a bizarre Instagram post about 'fake Sinners who play the victim' on Friday.
Rumours of a 'rift' between Katie and their daughter Princess have been growing in recent weeks after Katie didn't attend Princess's 18th birthday party, or appear on the nepo baby 's fly-on-the-wall ITV television series.
Katie later claimed that it was her daughter's management who had told her not to appear on the show.
Peter shared his side of the story on Thursday, explaining: 'For sixteen years, I have stayed silent in the face of repeated lies from my ex-wife and her family, out of respect for my children and loved ones, but staying silent has been incredibly frustrating. That ends today.
'The latest comments about my children's welfare and living arrangements compel me to set the record straight. For well-documented reasons, and for their safety, Junior and Princess came into my care in 2018 and remained with me until they reached adulthood.
'In 2019, the family courts issued a legally binding order to enforce this arrangement. I have never made this public before, out of respect for my children.
'In 2011 and 2015, publicly documented court cases found my ex-wife had made false claims. She was ordered to pay substantial damages and legal costs, and to apologise to me and my management. The same falsehoods are being repeated today.
'Unfortunately, there are many more lies and baseless accusations I have yet to address. Those will now be dealt with in the coming months.'
Peter went onto tell Daily Mail he's instilled 'politeness' into his two eldest kids Princess and Junior during their upbringing, after receiving some helpful advice from his wife Emily, who he married in 2015.
He said: 'I used to annoy the hell out of them when I used to say, when someone says, how are you, you don't just say good. You say, "I'm good, thank you. How are you?" Always ask that.
'One of the things with politeness, and listen, I've been in my teens and I've grown up, I'm 52 now and you know, my parents were so strict. One of the big things was manners. Always manners it's like such an important thing.
'And yeah, we've got to be protective of our daughters and sisters. But I realised one very, very big thing that Emily taught me probably about seven years, six years ago.
'She said to me, "you can't treat one different than the other. Whatever rules you have for one, you have for the other".
'And it was like a light bulb moment because I remember my sister being so, we were so protective over her that we didn't let her do anything.
'And actually, just because we were like that as kids, because that's what we were told, as I've gotten older, I thought, yeah, no, you're right, you've got to treat them all the same, all of them the same.'
While Peter's eldest children regularly post on social media, the musician admitted it'll be wholly different when it comes to his three children with wife Emily, Theo, eight, Amelia, 10, and Arabella, 16 months.
He said: 'This is the difference that when social media first came out, so when Princess and Junior were little kids, obviously there was no social media.
'Then when social media came out, you all went along with it, not knowing the dangers, just went with it because it was new and everyone was doing it and we were all doing it. Posting pictures of everyone and it's, and that was just how it went.
'It's only been really, I think, in the last one or two years that we've realised the dangers of what, you know, AI is doing now, because AI was definitely not around.
'But what AI's, what they can do with things on social media now, we're just like, "oh my God".
'So, the same rules will apply to the little ones, where it'll be like they're not really allowed to do anything till they're 16, but, the difference is that Emily's really adamant on social media with them, like, really adamant that they're not allowed to have it.
'So I'm like, I understand now that times are different, and we have to sort of go with that.
'So the rules will apply the same, but we'll probably be a lot more strict on things like social media. But then again, by the time they become teenagers, it might be a different world.'
Peter's chat with Daily Mail coincided with his role in Channel 5's upcoming series The Sunshine Murders, which is set to be broadcast on the channel next month.
The star, who plays a doctor tasked with examining victims of gruesome murders, said the role, which he filmed in Greece, has made him more inclined to pursue other acting roles in the future.
He said: 'Yes, absolutely. But I think for me, you know, I'm one of these people that studied acting as a kid and then I did music because I got signed up at 16 on a live television show, which I never expected, and then I just ran with it.
'I always said that when I get to my 40s, I'm going to move back into acting, and I've done a lot of short films in America, but they were never released, they were at like film festivals and stuff like that. And then I've done a couple of new features of them.
'It's definitely the area I'm gonna go in, but music's always my first love in.'
The Sunshine Murders will air on Channel 5 next month.
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