Hayden Panettiere Says Neutrogena Dumped Him During The Depression

Hayden Panettiere she says she ended her relationship with the great beauty during her battle with postpartum depression.
I Heroes The actress opens up about her mental health struggles after welcoming daughter Kaya in 2011 in her upcoming memoir, It's Me: Countingan excerpt of which was published by The Cut on Tuesday, May 12.
Panettiere, 36, has written candidly about abusing alcohol to cope with her depression and her varied lifestyle while on the show Nashville.
“One day at the beginning of season 4, I arrived red-faced, still reeling from the consequences of my life. [insomnia] med the night before. I've never been a morning person, but with the medicine, I was a zombie,” he shares. Two hours later, I woke up in the hospital.”
“'What's going on?' I asked, my eyes darting from side to side. 'I don't remember coming here. Is something happening to me?'” added the actor. The kind nurse who was about to take my vital signs said, 'Someone at your work found you asleep on the couch and couldn't wake you up, so they called an ambulance.'
In the middle NashvilleIn the fourth season, Panettiere's character, Juliette Barnes, was temporarily written to help her go into rehab, but said she lost another job.
“The producers had no choice but to write me off-script for a while – something that killed me because I've always been proud of my professionalism – and then I made a statement about where I was going and why,” he wrote. “My fans and the media were very sympathetic to me – and I'll always be grateful for that – but part of my career I was counting on. Neutrogena canceled my long-term contract, and it was another blow in a year that didn't provide anything else.”
Panettiere, who has appeared in various Neutrogena advertising campaigns, is referring to her collaboration with the brand ending with the latter. Us Weekly cover story.
“I'm talking about painful times and things that people don't even know about,” he said Us by writing about the darkest chapters in his life. “The abuse I went through at the hands of people who were supposed to be there to protect me. The confession in everything I did. I knew I was going to do this, I wanted to be brutally, painfully honest. When I was honest about postpartum depression Live with Kelly and Michael [in 2015]the results were shocking. After that interview, I didn't know when I walked off that stage that I was going to get a call saying, 'Neutrogena wants to fire you. It's not fair about this.' And you'll say, 'Wait a minute, of all things, how can they judge something that's human and real?'”
Us Weekly has reached out to Neutrogena's parent company, Kenvue, for comment.
It's Me: Counting published on Tuesday, May 19.
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