Former Disney star Christy Carlson Romano on finding her voice away from Hollywood: ‘I was fearful of leaving’

celebrity-news” target=”_blank”>Christy Carlson Romano< actress, 38, has since reemerged in Hollywood with her own blueprint, becoming a recognizable face and outspoken voice for a generation of fans who grew up flipping through channels before stopping on “Even Stevens,” where Romano played Ren Stevens, the big sister of Louis Stevens, played by shia-labeouf” target=”_blank”>Shia LaBeouf<

Now residing in Austin, Texas, Romano spends most of her days caring for her young daughters and creating content on her YouTube channel while peeling back the deep layers of her own rise and fall and that of her industry friends on the “Vulnerable” podcast. 

She also speaks with the actors and actresses behind showbiz’s most iconic animated voices on the “I Hear Voices” podcast which Romano hosts with Will Friedle – who fans will remember as lending his voice to Ron Stoppable on the coming of age Disney cartoon.

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Christy Carlson Romano and her husband Brendan Rooney. Romano lives in Texas with her Marine husband, who as she puts it, "is the advocate I always needed."

Christy Carlson Romano and her husband Brendan Rooney. Romano lives in Texas with her Marine husband, who as she puts it, "is the advocate I always needed."
(Bobby Bank/WireImage)

“I never would have thought of living in Austin and making YouTube content in the middle of a park,” she quipped of the shifted and balanced life she now lives with her husband, Brendan, a former United States Marine “who kind of looks like my old crush Leo DiCaprio.”

Romano previously revealed in a YouTube video on her channel that she “made millions” then lost it all after her Disney career, explaining that she blew much of her earnings on intangible purchases. She hadn’t even bought a home and later ended up in debt.

“I never would have thought of living in Austin and making YouTube content in the middle of a park.”

— Christy Carlson Romano

“I really regret not investing my money wisely,” the voice actress said in the video. She had also once admitted to receiving a book deal that earned her around $1 million – but lamented blowing it all in the same year on various purchases and a psychic to whom she paid “a bunch of money.”

Romano told Fox News Digital when she finally left Hollywood, a weight was lifted as she meandered through life with much more clarity and credited her struggles for shaping her into the mother and content creator she is today.

Fox News Digital spoke to Romano about navigating the pitfalls of showbiz as a child star, how Tinseltown is not as “glamorous” as it looks and her life in Texas with her Marine husband, who as she puts it, “is the advocate I always needed.”

Former Disney Channel star Christy Carlson Romano told Fox News Digital she was "fearful" of leaving California while working as a young actress in Hollywood.

Former Disney Channel star Christy Carlson Romano told Fox News Digital she was "fearful" of leaving California while working as a young actress in Hollywood.
(KRYSTAL EVE PHOTOGRAPHY)

Fox News Digital: Did you ever feel like you would get to this point where you’d be this comfortable putting yourself back into the limelight with “Christy’s Throwback Kitchen” and of course the other lifestyle projects you’ve consumed yourself with?

Christy Carlson Romano: Thank you. I mean, it was a learning experience for me because I had been so quiet for so long, and so it was a learning experience to finally get that kind of engagement you get when you start to strike it. When you’re not hitting the numbers, everyone’s quiet, but when you start standing up for something and you start hitting the numbers people are like, ‘Oh, she’s got a point of view,’ then I think that’s when you start to hear a lot of like feedback. 

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Like, I had a few people do like funny parodies of my actual vlogs, so people started to kind of mimic that and it was in good fun. And I think the thing is that you have to understand that if you’re going to put yourself out there, not only is there going to be some criticism, which I’ve been very lucky to kind of have not a ton of, you know – I kind of pride myself on being unproblematic. And so the fact that I was able to touch a lot of people’s hearts with the content meant a lot to me. And, you know, I don’t have to just look at all the negatives. I can choose to look at all the positives, which, I’ll tell you there was a lot more positive support when I finally started to kind of do my own thing than there was any kind of negativity.

“There are so many things I could have done with my life outside of the business. I didn’t have to live in California, that’s for one. I shouldn’t have felt fearful of leaving.”

— Christy Carlson Romano

Fox News Digital: How would you describe your relationship with paparazzi back then when you were most recognizable because you weren’t regularly snapped in public as much as many of your peers?

Christy Carlson Romano: I was out. I just never got that paparazzi exposure, which I think helped people before social media. And I think that’s why the paparazzi were important to some degree to kind of keep people’s names out there. You know, before Instagram and before Twitter, there was only MySpace and Facebook, and MySpace was mostly for new music if you were verified so like you weren’t able to keep your name out there if you weren’t on a show. So the way that people had to do that was to either do Maxim and FHM [For Him Magazine] or they were going to look cute and go out and have a few drinks and talk s–t, I guess. 

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But I never really got swept up, even though I went out and I was hoping that my point of view could come across – because one thing I will say about paparazzi, is that I do have respect for the fact – not necessarily for some people who violate certain kind of [rules] when it comes to the kids and stuff – I’ve never had to experience that, but I’m sure you understand… that stuff I would never condone. But what I will say about it is this, at least before social media, the paparazzi gave you an opportunity to speak your mind if you had a moment to talk about it. So, there was that. I never did that and I was never part of that.

Christy Carlson Romano has two video podcasts in addition to her daily video blog series.

Christy Carlson Romano has two video podcasts in addition to her daily video blog series.
(KRYSTAL EVE PHOTOGRAPHY)

Fox News Digital: How did you avoid some of the pitfalls that really come with being a child star and what did you learn from growing up so young in the business when being vulnerable in the ’90s and early-2000s was so looked down upon? 

Romano: OK, so great question. A lot to unpack there. So basically, I have to say sometimes I’m the most famous-unfamous person I know which is the best kind of famous to be, especially because I didn’t avoid the pitfalls. I actually had quite a few of them. Now, maybe not all of them, right? I was never strung out. I was never yachting or anything like that. But I definitely understand what it’s like to have a lot of things going on in your twenties and not have a lot of support and inspiration to kind of pull yourself through that. 

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“If you feel like you have to be there, it’s not as glamorous as people think it is if you have to be in that bubble.”

— Christy Carlson Romano on Tinseltown

So you kind of become really depressed and you kind of just try to find ways of coping. And I tried a lot of different things, you know. I tried Buddhism, you know, Scientology, like, you name it, I was at least looking into it. I’m not saying I went on the road all the way. You’re simply searching for answers in every single way that you possibly can and definitely in a lot of codependent relationships and stuff like that. And it’s sad, you know – like when I look back on it, I really wish I could get that time back.

There are so many things I could have done with my life outside of the business. I didn’t have to live in California, that’s for one. I shouldn’t have felt fearful of leaving because I wouldn’t have gotten a call to come back, or I lost an audition that would have made… you live in so much fear thinking ‘I can’t leave.’ And a lot of my friends that are still in the industry and working, they still feel that way. They can’t leave, they’ve got to be there just in case, you know. And it’s like, great, I’m glad that you’re still working and you’re still doing your thing, but you have no independence when you have to stay in California. If you feel like you have to be there, it’s not as glamorous as people think it is if you have to be in that bubble.

Christy Carlson Romano said she once "made millions" from her days as a Disney starlet before losing it all.

Christy Carlson Romano said she once "made millions" from her days as a Disney starlet before losing it all.
(KRYSTAL EVE PHOTOGRAPHY)

Fox News Digital: Do you remember experiencing any types of criticism as a young performer from anyone and thinking to yourself, ‘They have no idea what I’m going through right now?’

Romano: One hundred percent. So basically, even though I don’t talk to Shia LaBeouf or hilary-duff” target=”_blank”>Hilary Duff<

I was into Leo DiCaprio. Those are my crushes. And it’s funny because I look at my husband and he kind of looks like DiCaprio. [Laughs] I circled around back, you know? I was watching some really random stuff growing up – like I watched ‘The Mary Tyler Moore Show’ with my mom and Mary Tyler Moore had a very wholesome approach to comedy that I kind of brought with me subconsciously. And she had big brown eyes and brown hair and a bubbly personality, but kind of Type-A and Mary Tyler Moore was an icon. You know, I think she really, in the early, early ages for me, was one of my inspirations. But that’s only because my mom would put on ‘Nick at Night’ and I would watch her growing up. And then and then in terms of whoever else I was looking up to, it was hard because when I came onto the scene, there wasn’t a lot of children’s programming on. 

There were not a lot of other people that you would want to look up to. There was Paris Hilton and britney-spears” target=”_blank”>Britney Spears<

Honestly, to be perfectly honest with you – I’m trying to kind of bring my brand back to life. Now, if I’m at a point where I feel like they have enough signs of readiness, we will approach it sort of as a family because now I have my husband involved, and he’s extremely smart, and he’s going to be launching his own influencer agency because he does all my deals, and he’s learned so much. 

“He’s a former Marine and he doesn’t take guff from anybody.”

— Christy Carlson Romano on her husband

He’s a former Marine and he doesn’t take guff from anybody. He is the advocate I always needed, so I have that in him. So if we’re going to do it as a family, it’s not just going to be me being Kris Jenner. I’m not going to be a one-woman show. It’s going to be a whole family thing that we choose to do for them. And, we’re setting them up – they’ve got verified Instagram accounts, but they’re privatized. It’s not like we’re trying to throw them into the fold, as much as we’ll give them the opportunity when it makes sense. Right now, it does not make sense. 

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We’re going to take it day by day because right now, one of them is potty-training and the other one is just starting school. Like, ‘Here’s the camera to put in front of your face.’ That’s not where we’re at. (Laughs).

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