For more than a decade she held the power to make or break the careers of aspiring young models.
Yet now it is Tyra Banks' career that is being threatened after a series of revelations emerged about the unhinged practises on her Noughties show, America's Next Top Model.
Last month, Tyra came under fire when Reality Check, a Netflix expose about the series, revealed producers covered up an incident of sexual assault, while also shining a modern spotlight on the past incidents of racism and fat-shaming.
Now Tyra faces a fresh wave of criticism with the release of E!'s Dirty Rotten Scandals, a rival documentary to the Netflix hit, which has been criticised for not holding Tyra to account.
The follow up did not feature Tyra herself, but included former contestants as well as fellow judge Janice Dickinson, who did not hold back in her criticism of Tyra, branding her a 'hardcore b***h'.
Cycle 17 winner Lisa D'Amato also had nothing pleasant to say about Tyra, vowing to never stop speaking out because the host and producer Ken Mok were 'still profiting off the tears and the trauma of the girls'.
Tyra Banks' career is being threatened after a series of revelations emerged about the unhinged practises on her Noughties show America's Next Top Model
Lisa was famously crowned the winner of the All Stars season after Angelea Preston was stripped of her title
Angelea won the 2011 season and was due to sign a $100,000 contract with Covergirl cosmetics, however, after another unnamed contestant reported to Tyra that she had previously worked as an escort, they took back her win.
Runner-up Lisa was then crowned the winner instead, leading to Angelea suing the show for breach of contract.
Discussing the incident on Dirty Rotten Scandals, Angelea said: 'My dream was right there, like somebody dangling candy in front of a kid. They gave me $300 cash like some pity money and sent me on my way.'
Angelea's absence was not explained on the show, with fans sent into a frenzy as they speculated about her sudden withdrawal.
'I felt used, I felt like a throwaway,' she recalled. 'There could've been a sensible reason for why I didn't make the final runway but they wanted people to question what happened to me to boost their ratings. It wasn't right.'
Lisa added: 'She was set up from the very beginning to be the one that's disqualified at the end.'
Three years later, Angelea filed a lawsuit against Tyra and the CW network for $3 million yet ultimately dropped the case because 'I realised I wasn’t going to win.
'I didn’t get any money from it. The only good thing that happened [was that] people knew I was the winner.'
Another model who claimed they were set up to lose was Jeana Turner, who claimed her battle with alopecia was exploited on the show.
Jeana was famously encouraged to shave her head during the makeover episode, yet claimed she had been previously been told she would be fitted with a wig.
'I had a lot of insecurities about losing my hair but I thought being on the show was an opportunity to find myself,' she explained.
'Looking back at it, their editing was that deceptive that they were able to make an audience think that I felt powerful. I felt so small.'
Jeana noted that she was never going to be able to win because for the first and only season the winning prize was a contract with a hair company rather than a cosmetic brand.
'How was I ever going to win when Pantene was a hair company?' Jeana exclaimed. I don't have hair!'
Angelea Preston opened up about winning the 2011 season but having her title revoked after it emerged she previously worked as an escort
Angelea's sudden absence was not explained on the show (pictured) with fans sent into a frenzy as they speculated about her sudden withdrawal
Lisa D'Amato, who competed on cycle five then returned and won cycle 17, noted: 'All of us were sleep deprived, all of us weren't able to eat enough food'
Despite her uncomfortable experience on the show, Lisa returned six years later for the All Stars cycle in a bid for 'redemption' and to 'change her life' (pictured on All Stars in 2011)
Yet winning the show wasn't all it was cracked up to be anyway, with cycle nine model Sarah Hartshorne noting that the grand prize of the £100,000 modelling contract was merely the 'promise of the opportunity to do 100k work over a year.'
She added: 'They're under no obligation to pay you.'
Cycle two winner Yoanna House said of her experience: 'For one year I was indebted to America's Next Top Model.
'I had to do a lot of appearances [and] I never got paid for any of them. I was sleeping on a couch and had to figure out how I was going to eat.'
While Yoanna went on to pick up other modelling jobs she revealed she quickly developed a workout disorder after struggling with the extreme pressure to lose weight for bookings.
She revealed she became so underweight that she didn't menstruate for two years and was warned that if she carried on with her extreme dieting that she could impact her fertility.
Another model who struggled with her body image on the show was Keenyah Hill, who was famously criticised by judge Janice for her 'gut'.
'Putting that on TV was really dangerous because I was so, so thin,' she said.
'I've had so many people message me and say that they've developed eating disorders after watching, and it sucks.'
Keenyah suffered from lasting effects from the jibes, revealing she couldn't eat in public after the show.
While Janice was known for her acid tongue on the show, she claimed that it was Tyra encouraging her to be cruel, claiming the models were psychologically tortured to feed her ego.
The 'world's first supermodel', 71, said: 'The producers, especially Tyra, were begging me to be harsher and cruel, like Simon Cowell was on American Idol.'
Janice also referenced Tyra's notorious melt down when eliminating Tiffany Richardson, recalling: 'Tyra didn't want any competition.
'She went off on one girl and it was so frightening that I was going to get up and hold her down.
'She would go harder on the black girls on the show because of competitiveness and jealousy and her being older than these young women.
'She was always trying to be this tough teen mum to the girls but she didn't know them, she didn't give them enough confidence.'
Claiming that Tyra was profiting off their pain, Janice continued: 'They left the show completely depressed and depleted while she got so rich.
'America's Next Top Model really tortured these girls for Tyra's ego. I was there and I saw it for four seasons. She was a hardcore b***h.'
Another model who claimed they were set up to lose was Jeana Turner, who claimed her battle with alopecia was exploited on the show
Jeana was famously encouraged to shave her head during the makeover episode (pictured) yet claimed she had been previously been told she would be fitted with a wig
Cycle two winner Yoanna House said of her experience: 'For one year I was indebted to America's Next Top Model. I had to do a lot of appearances [and] I never got paid for them'
While Yoanna went on to pick up other modelling jobs she revealed she quickly developed a workout disorder after struggling with the extreme pressure to lose weight for bookings (pictured on the show in 2004)
All Stars winner Lisa also had nothing pleasant to say about Tyra, claiming her experience of childhood abuse was 'weaponised' against her and used to create storylines.
Lis, who first competed on cycle five then returned and won cycle 17, noted: 'All of us were sleep deprived, all of us weren't able to eat enough food.
'They know what they're doing and it's intentional.'
During her initial stint on the show, Lisa was filmed in the model house while intoxicated, and claims there has been a stigma around her drinking ever since.
She was abused by her mother in childhood and claimed that producers continuously put pressure to discuss her trauma on camera, somethin that made her incredibly uncomfortable and encouraged her erratic behaviour.
Reflecting on a scene in which she drank too much and fell asleep outside, she explained: 'I wasn't eating correctly, I wasn't sleeping, and I probably had a couple too many glasses of wine.
'I was always one moment away from fully losing it. Because they were weaponising my childhood trauma, they wanted to f**k with me emotionally. Tyra made me look absolutely crazy on purpose.
She noted that when fellow model Coryn Woitel labelled her an 'alcoholic b**h', it 'set the tone of what I've been called around the globe for 15 years.
'I was set up to be publicly humiliated on repeat forever, so Tyra could make money.'
Despite her uncomfortable experience on the show, Lisa returned six years later for the All Stars cycle in a bid for 'redemption' and to 'change her life'.
Yet she revealed she quickly realised that things wouldn't be better the second time around, claiming the contestants were rounded up and forced to sit in a van for four hours with paper bags over their heads so they couldn't see their surroundings.
She described the experience as resembling the controversial psychological study, The Stanford Prison Experiment.
Another model who struggled with her body image on the show was Keenyah Hill, who was famously criticised by judge Janice for her 'gut'
Keenyah suffered from lasting effects from the jibes, revealing she couldn't eat in public after the show (pictured being weighed on the programme)
Cycle nine's Sarah Hartshorne revealed the strict rules they had to follow on the show, claiming producers used 'cult techniques' to control them
'I was told I was too thin to be a plus-size model but too fat to be America's Next Top Model,' Sarah mused (she is pictured on the show in 2007)
Cycle nine's Sarah also claimed the producers used 'cult techniques' to manipulate them on the show.
Revealing the depths to which the contestants were controlled on the show, she said: 'I read the book Cultish, about cults of every level and the tools they all use... Top Model they used all of them.'
She explained: 'They controlled when we went to the bathroom, when we ate, when we slept, when we were allowed to speak to each other.
'They isolated us from our friends and family, we weren't allowed to have magazines, newspapers, anything that showed what day or time it was.
'[They used] the same phrase over and over again, "if you violate the confidentiality agreement we will dock your wages for the rest of your life".
'We were so sucked into just doing what they wanted and we were just following every order because Tyra Banks was just the air that we breathed. We would do anything for her.'
She added that they were told the cameras could film them at all times while working and during their downtime in the model house.
The one exception was if they were alone in the bathroom, but she claimed producers told them to 'shower together... for the environment'.
Sarah continued: 'If you didn't follow the rules we would be punished, they could take away our books and take away our iPods so you'd have to sit in silence for hours.'
On the intensity of the process, Sarah revealed they would spend between 12 and 18 hours filming the elimination days, meaning they'd be up until the early hours.
She recalled: 'On the first day a crew member warned us, "a girl faints every week so if you feel like you're feeling faint, don't be a hero, raise your hand and someone will come help you." First day it was me! I had to raise my hand.'
Yoanna also struggled with the strict rules. She explained: 'The rules in the house were challenging.
'The lights were always on, even when you were ready to go to bed. There was no cell phone usage. You were not allowed to leave the house, no windows were allowed to be opened.
'You're almost an animal. It felt like it was an experiment, to see how easily we could break.'
Tyra declined to comment when approached by E! The Daily Mail have reached out to Tyra and fellow producer Ken Mok.
Dirty Rotten Scandals: America’s Next Top Model premieres March 11 at 9:00pm ET/PT with two back-to-back episodes
America's Next Top Model's biggest scandals
Controversial photoshoots
While ANTM was known for pushing the boundaries with its photoshoots, one of its most unhinged concepts came in season four, when the models were required to 'swap race'.
The shoot was presented to demonstrate how makeup can 'transform' but it saw the white models don blackface while the black models were dressed up as Native American and Korean - all while posing with a child of the same race they were representing.
Tyra defended the shoot, confessing: 'I didn't think it was controversial. I was in my own little bubble, in my own little head. This was my way of showing the world that brown and black is beautiful.'
To make matters worse, the concept was repeated nine cycles later in Season 13.
Another inappropriate photoshoot saw the models pose as homeless people while in shot with people who really were living on the streets.
Judge Jay described the concept to the models by telling them: 'We're going to put a spotlight on a major issue, and that is homeless youth.
'You're going to be posing with homeless partners, but here's the deal. You girls will be in street clothing, and the other girls will be in high fashion.'
While ANTM was known for pushing the boundaries with its photoshoot, one of its most unhinged concepts came in season four, when the models were required to 'swap race'
Another inappropriate photoshoot saw the models pose as homeless people while in shot with people who really were living on the streets
The shoot was inspired by Tyra's experience of posing as a homeless person for a day for her talk show.
Season eight contestant Dionne Walters appeared on the show to hit out at the crime scene photoshoot, that required her to to pose as if she had been shot in the head, despite producers knowing that her own mother had been shot and left paralszed.
She shared: 'They knew about it from the application process, but they still chose to have me do this particular photo shoot that involved gun violence.
'I thought it was a coincidence at the time, but I don't think that it was. I think they wanted to see some type of mental breakdown or to see me crumble. I'm just glad they didn't get the reaction they were hoping for.'
Producer Ken then took 'full responsibility' for the shoot, saying it was a 'mistake to celebrate violence' in that way.
Of the bizarre photoshoots, Tyra said: 'We kept pushing more and more. You guys were demanding it! The viewers wanted more and more.
'Yeah, there's some dumb s**t. I mean, dumb. I'm like, "What the hell."'
Sexual assault 'cover up'
Arguably the most memorable storyline from ANTM season two revolved around Shandi Sullivan 'cheating' on her boyfriend with an Italian model
Now, Shandi has claimed that what was framed as a drunken indiscretion was in fact sexual assault, revealing she 'blacked out' before the act but 'no one did anything to stop it'
Arguably the most memorable storyline from ANTM season two revolved around Shandi Sullivan 'cheating' on her boyfriend with an Italian model.
The cameras rolled as Shandi slept with the model before tearfully calling her boyfriend - who later dumped her.
Now, Shandi has claimed that what was framed as a drunken indiscretion was in fact sexual assault, revealing she 'blacked out' before the act but 'no one did anything to stop it.'
Speaking on the Netflix show, she shared: 'I remember being in the shower. And then just sitting in the shower. And then we were in the bed.
'I was blacked out for a lot of it. I didn't even feel sex happening, I just knew it was happening, and then I passed out.
'I think after getting out of the hot tub, and whatever happened after that, I think they should've been like, "All right, this has gone too far. We gotta pull her out of this."'
On the decision to keep filming, executive producer Ken said: 'We treated Top Model as a documentary.
'We told the girls that on day one, when they would show up, "There's going to be cameras with you 24/7, day in and day out, and they're going to cover everything."'
As for Tyra, she opted not to comment on the scandal, stating: 'it's a little difficult for me to talk about production because that's not my territory.'
'Racist' remarks
Season one's Ebony Haith has spoken out about her treatment as a black woman on the show, revealing the hair stylists laughed at the texture of her hair and didn't know how to cut it
Season one's Ebony Haith has spoken out about her treatment as a black woman on the show, where she was referred to as 'harsh, aggressive, and angry.'
She revealed the mistreatment started from the very beginning when she underwent a makeover for the show, recalling: 'I'm sitting there, and I have three of the top stylists over my head, laughing at my hair texture.
'It was really just frustrating. People did not have the correct clippers. Everyone basically said they didn't know what to do.
'They ended up giving me three bald spots. Very disappointing.'
Ebony revealed she got a call from Tyra later in the day: 'I'm thinking that my sister is going to understand.
'I thought she was going to say, "Girl, don't worry, I'll go to Harlem." And she says, "The judges have been talking to me, and they¿ve been saying you¿ve been showing up ashy every day." And I'm blown away.'
Ebony continued: 'I didn't understand why they chose those specific words when this is a word that's been used in history that's made us feel less-than.'
A clip then showed Tyra telling Ebony: 'With your skin texture, being an African American woman, it should be like butter. At the retouching session, your photo was the hardest we had to do.'
Fat-shaming
Season 1 contestant Giselle Samson has revealed that comments the judges made about her weight have stayed with her two decades on
In one shoot, judge Janice Dickinson called out Keenya Hill's 'gut', while the model was also chosen to represent an elephant in an animal-themed shoot
Season 1 contestant Giselle Samson has revealed that comments the judges made about her weight have stayed with her two decades on.
In one scene, the judges were seen scrutisining one of her photographs, with one judge remarking: 'She's got a wide a**,' to which another judge agreed: 'It's kind of wide.'
Giselle was just 18 at the time and revealed: 'How I left feeling about myself in that moment has stayed with me forever. Why does my a** have to be so wide? That's how I talk to myself to this day.'
Judge Janice Dickinson also famously teared into season four contestant Keenyah Hill after taking part in a seven deadly sins themed photoshoot, where she portrayed gluttony.
Janice branded the model 'piggy chic,' while the judges agreed that she 'looked dumpy'.
In another shoot, Janice called out Keenyah's 'gut', while the model was also chosen to represent an elephant in an animal-themed shoot.
Whitney Thompson, the first 'plus-size' winner of America's Next Top Model, opened up about the struggles she faced feeling fat shamed on Tyra Banks' show.
The model, who won cycle 10 of the show in 2008, recalled some of her lowest moments, including feeling that certain challenges were made deliberately harder for her as a plus-size model.
Whitney, who was just 20 and a US size 6 (UK size 10) when she started on ANTM, told People that not having proper clothes for the plus-size contestants 'felt intentional'.
'I just pretended like it didn't bother me, but, and I'm sure most of the girls would do this, I would cry in the shower every day because the shower is the only place that the cameramen couldn¿t come, so that was your safe place to release and be like, "Why are they doing this to me?"' she explained.
She added, 'I knew that they were trying to poke me and get something out of me, so I just played it cool, like, "That's fine. We'll just duct tape my dress. No worries.'"
On-set harassment
Season four's Keenyah recalled being harassed after male models were brought in for a photoshoot in Africa, claiming model Bertini was 'aggressively hitting on' her
Season four's Keenyah recalled being harassed after male models were brought in for a photoshoot in Africa, claiming model Bertini was 'aggressively hitting on' her.
Keenyah recalled: 'Bertini was touching me, grabbing me... To be on a TV set in front of so many people and still not be protected is some pretty dark stuff.'
While she asked to stop the shoot after revealing she felt 'uncomfortable', Keenyah claims she had no sympathetic response from the crew, with the picture ultimately chosen as her best being one where Bertini was grabbing her legs.
At the time Tyra advised Keenyah to use her 'feminine wiles' and lightheartedly ask men to 'back off' if they made her uncomfortable on a set.
However, addressing the controversy now she admitted she was in the wrong and apologised to Keenyah for her flippant response.
Unwanted cosmetic procedures
While the models traditionally underwent makeovers at the start of the series - typically just a change in hair and makeup - Tyra ramped up the ante in season six when she surprised two models with a trip to the dentist.
The cycle's winner Dani Evans arrived with a gap between her teeth, a quirk she called her 'signature' look.
Yet Tyra took issue with Dani's appearance, telling her: 'Do you really think you can have a cover girl contract with a gap in your mouth? It's not marketable.'
Dani recalled: 'When Tyra called my name she was like, if I decided to keep you, are you going to get your gap closed? That's when I was like, "So what you're saying to me is if I don't get my gap closed, you're going to send me home?"
'I decided to play the game and got my gap closed. It's my life and it was toyed with, consciously. And me saying no and then going against that, it's invasive.'
While the models traditionally underwent makeovers at the start of the series, Tyra ramped up the ante in season six when she surprised two models with a trip to the dentist
Reflecting on the incident, Tyra shared: 'I've actually apologised for the issue with Dani and what happened.
'That was between a rock and a hard place for me, because there were agents that would tell me, "She will not get work with those teeth."
'Again, I could have just been quiet and let them handle it. But that's hindsight/ 20/20 for all of us. It just so happens that a lot of things that are 20/20 for me happened in front of the world.'
Yet Dani revealed she didn't accept the apology, stating 'me getting my gap closed is not opening any doors for me', before accusing Tyra of 'making good TV at my expense'.
That same season, runner-up Joanie Dodds was encouraged to go to the dentist to fix her 'snaggletooth'.
While Joanie was happy to go through with the procedure, she noted that she had to sign a release on the spot without talking to her mother or a lawyer first.
She revealed she had no idea what the procedure would entail, with the surgery lasting all night, removing several of her teeth and having all her front teeth shaved down.
Joanie recalled: 'The next photoshoot we did was actually the one where we were crying. I was like, I am in pain. This isn't hard. I was so miserable.'
She also noted that the surgery was purely for aesthetic purposes, stating. 'I've still got a crazy bite issue, and those problems will never be resolved.
'It was f***ed up, but at the end of the day, I was a grown adult woman with teeth I thought I would never fix, so I felt like I'd won the lottery.'

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