UPDATE:
13-year-old Romy, who broke down in tears on The Voice Kids last night, appeared on A Current Affair this evening with her parents to talk about the experience of appearing on the reality television show.
Romy told the current affairs program that she was “very happy” with her performance. The teenager also came to the defence of her parents, after they had been slammed on social media for allowing their daughter to appear on the program.
“I don’t know why they’re accusing them, they’re the best,” she told ACA. “If they wouldn’t have allowed me [to go on the show] then I wouldn’t have been allowed to go on the journey of The Voice Kids, so I’m happy and they’re the best parents.
“If you have a dream just go for it, it’s not like it’s just going to come to you. Haters can hate, that’s what they do, they just try and make other people go down…”
Romy’s mother, Liza, also defended the decision to allow her daughter to appear on the program. “Putting your child up there on national TV, not knowing what could happen, it’s a television program. Although we know she has a beautiful voice, you just never know what’s going to occur on the night.”
Her dad, Richard, agreed.“People were concerned with her being upset last night, I think she would have been a lot more upset if we had actually stood in the way of her going forward with The Voice, it was something she really, really wanted to do,” he said.
Previously, Mia Freedman wrote:
Every Sunday night for the past few weeks, I’ve been watching The Voice Kids with my children. It’s great family entertainment. We also love to watch Masterchef and animal documentaries. Simple pleasures.
Kids competing in a singing contest in front of celebrity judges and a big audience, filmed for a reality show was always going to be a tricky one to get right and there has been some predictable and valid debate around whether it’s appropriate to expose kids to that kind of public scrutiny.
Top Comments
People on reality shows cry all the time , I cry all the time (sometimes for silly reasons) hehe nothing wrong with occasionally experiencing emotions that bring us to tears. Shouldn't be different for the kids
If Romy and her parents were, and still are, ok with it going to air then I don't have a problem with it. Yes, life is tough, and better to be exposed to that fact than hidden from it. I agree that Romy and her family should be extremely proud of her guts to get up there in the first place and to perform in front of a live audience. As an adult, I've performed and spoken in front of live audiences and it is a really tough gig, not as easy as it might appear. So, congratulations Romy, well done for your courage and ability to do that.