
Reality TV star is unrecognizable in rare throwback photo at age 12... can you guess who this superstar is?
Today, he's a reality TV star and podcast host that has conquered his demons and found his place in the world.
But back when he was 12, he didn't feel as though he belonged and feared he would be misunderstood if he were to be his true self.
This star is now known for their hairstyling prowess and stars on one of the biggest shows where he helps conduct life-changing makeovers.
However he got candid about his childhood fears as he shared a throwback photo of himself at age 12.
In the photo, the future star wore a blue T-shirt, jeans, and several necklaces as he posed by a bike.
Can you guess who it is?
It's Jonathan Van Ness of Queer Eye for the Straight Guy.
Van Ness is now releasing a book entitled Let Them Star, and on Thursday shared the throwback photo along with a meaningful message about the page-turner and the limitations he perceived about his hometown as a child.
'This is 12 year old Jonathan. He didn't see a possibility of staying in his hometown after high school.
'He didn't see a place where he could build a community that would see and accept him for who we was,' he continued.
'He wasn't able to see a world where small towns celebrated and lifted queer people.
'This 12-year-old Jonathan would escape in the fantasies of Casper, Harriet the Spy and Now & Then.
'I wrote Let Them State for not just this Jonathan, but for the millions of other people who have felt like they don't belong or can't see a future for themselves where they are.'
He continued: 'I want this Jonathan and all people (young and of all ages) to see themselves in Sully, and in this book.
'I want them to not only see but believe that no matter where they are, there can not only survive, but thrive.
He concluded: 'That Quincy, Illinois is home for this 12-year-old Jonathan and always will be. And he doesn't have to run away to feel accepted for who he is.'
The book Van Ness wrote is called Let Them Stare and it hits bookstore shelves on May 20.
Previously, Van Ness, 38, who is nonbinary but uses all pronouns, blasted a bombshell Rolling Stone report which had claimed that they were emotionally 'abusive' on set of the reality series as not being 'based in reality.'
They appeared on the Table Manners With Jessie And Lennie Ware podcast last summer and said: 'I think a lot of people were like looking for a reason to hate me or like looking for a reason to be like, "See, I always knew that they were a fake c*** and this is the proof."'
'He didn't see a place where he could build a community that would see and accept him for who we was,' he continued
Jonathan thanked the support system they had while saying they tried to keep off of social media during that period.
The reality star explained: 'My family was so supportive of my husband and my team, but I didn't even get on social media or, like, look at my phone for three weeks.'
Jonathan said their castmates first learned of the expose back in December 2023 and they claimed that a lot of the information that had been gathered was 'taken out of context' in order to make them look 'as bad as possible.'
They said: 'I think people forget no matter how famous you are you're still a person.
'That article came at like an incredibly vulnerable time, like for my hair care company, for like my whole career. It just was really rough.'
Jonathan went on to completely the article as being 'completely untrue' and alleged that it was done 'in bad faith.'
However they did admit that there may have been some times when they had snapped at people or 'could have done better.'
The bombshell report Jonathan was responding to was published by Rolling Stone in March 2024.
According to multiple production sources, who all spoke to the publication anonymously, Van Ness made the show increasingly difficult to produce due to his behind-the-scenes behavior.
They were accused of being 'emotionally abusive', having 'rage issues', and being a 'nightmare.'
'There's a real emotion of fear around them when they get angry. It's almost like a cartoon where it oozes out of them,' claimed one source.
'It's intense and scary,' they added, further claiming that Van Ness was a 'yeller' who would 'explode once a week'.
One source said that Van Ness has a 'very warm, very charismatic' side to their personality which is what the public sees, but there's another side that comes out behind the scenes.
'At least once a day, they would need to yell at somebody. It might be something small, but there's always going to be somebody to point out and blame and make the villain of the day,' they alleged.
Rolling Stone also claimed that the Queer Eye cast were engaged in 'petty disputes and competition' with each other over screen time and who was the 'top star' on the show.
Queer Eye, starring Antoni Porowski, Tan France, Karamo Brown, Bobby Berk, and Van Ness, premiered on Netflix in 2018 and immediately became a pop culture phenomenon.
While each cast member has gone on to find success on their own terms, Van Ness was arguably the breakout star of the series.
Not only does Van Ness have the most social media followers of the group, they have published three books -including a New York Times bestseller- and launched the hit podcast Getting Curious with Jonathan Van Ness.
The podcast was turned into its own standalone Netflix series in 2022.
Van Ness also has a successful haircare line called JVN, which is stocked in Sephora.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
35 minutes ago
- BBC News
The Interview Martina Navratilova: 'Women are still judged by a different metric than men'
'Women are still judged by a different metric than men' Amol Rajan speaks to Martina Navratilova, one of the greatest-ever tennis players, about her life and career. The story of her rise to the top of the game is as remarkable as the number of tournaments she managed to win. Born behind the Iron Curtain in Czechoslovakia in 1956, she was 11-years-old when she watched Soviet tanks roll in to the country as Moscow sought to reassert control and quash political reform. Navratilova, who played in her first tennis tournament when she was eight, rose to both national and international prominence in the years that followed. But in 1975, following the Czech government's efforts to control her tennis career, she defected. Aged 18, Navratilova sought asylum in the United States, where she later became an American citizen. During the late 1970s and 1980s she dominated the international tennis circuit, and by the time she retired, she'd won 59 major singles and doubles titles. But throughout her life, Navratilova has generated headlines on the front pages of newspapers, as well as the back. She came out as being gay in 1981, a rare thing for high-profile athletes to do at the time, and quickly became a prominent figure in the gay rights movement. More recently, however, she's found herself at odds with some groups due to her views on transgender athletes. She's also battled cancer on two separate occasions. Thank you to the Amol Rajan Interviews team for their help in making this programme. The Interview brings you conversations with people shaping our world, from all over the world. The best interviews from the BBC. You can listen on the BBC World Service, Mondays and Wednesdays at 0700 GMT. Or you can listen to The Interview as a podcast, out twice a week on BBC Sounds, Apple, Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts. Presenter: Amol Rajan Producers: Ben Cooper, Joel Mapp Sound: Dave O'Neill Editor: Nick Holland Get in touch with us on email TheInterview@ and use the hashtag #TheInterviewBBC on social media. (Image: Martina Navratilova. Credit: Roy Rochlin/Getty)


Daily Mail
38 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
NBA fans savage Broadway icon's national anthem before finals Game 7 between Thunder and Pacers
Tony Award winner Kristin Chenoweth was slammed by NBA fans for her performance of the national anthem before Game 7 between the Oklahoma City Thunder and Indiana Pacers. Chenoweth, an Oklahoma native and passionate Thunder fan, took center stage live on ABC in the moments before tip off at the first Game 7 in the finals for nine years. But her rendition of 'The Star-Spangled Banner', in which she delivered one particularly long high note, did not go down well. It was described by one ABC viewer on social media as 'the worst national anthem I ever heard'. Another viewer posted: 'Geeze these national anthem singers are getting worse every time'. A third commented: 'I just witnessed another trashing of a national anthem.' Other fans described it as 'horrible' and 'rough'. Referring to the high note Chenoweth hit, one brutal fan posted: 'The end of that anthem made my dog uncomfortable'. Chenoweth's Thunder fandom has been no secret since the franchise's early years, though she also has professed at times to liking the Los Angeles Lakers and New York Knicks as well. That said, the Thunder are clearly her top choice - so much so that she once told the Tulsa World she spent three hours bedazzling a Thunder hat. She went to Oklahoma City University after growing up in Broken Arrow, about 115 miles northeast of where the Thunder play. And her 8-year-old dog's name is Thunder. She even dressed the pup up once in a Thunder outfit. 'I never miss a game unless I'm on stage,' Chenoweth said. 'I was a cheerleader in high school in Broken Arrow, Oklahoma, and I loved football, but my favorite was basketball. 'I like how much of a team player you've got to be and this is my team.' Chenoweth has sung the anthem at a few Thunder games in the past, sometimes alone and at least once with children from her Chenoweth Broadway Bootcamp. That camp is part of the arts and education fund that she founded to cultivate 'young artistic expression by enriching children´s lives through the power of education, entertainment and experience.' Chenoweth won a Tony Award in 1999 for best leading actress in a musical for her role in 'You´re a Good Man, Charlie Brown.' She received two other Tony nominations for best leading actress in a musical, one in 2004 for playing Glinda in 'Wicked' - she lost to co-star Idina Menzel - and the other in 2015 for playing 1930s Hollywood diva Lily Garland in 'On the Twentieth Century.' And in 2009, she won an Emmy for best supporting actress in a comedy series for her work on ABC's 'Pushing Daisies.' She returns to Broadway this fall, playing Jackie Siegel in 'The Queen of Versailles.'


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Pixar's Elio earns the worst box office debut in studio history with just $21 million
DreamWorks' live-action take on How to Train Your Dragon continued its run atop the box office, but a new Pixar film made franchise history... in the worst way. How to Train Your Dragon dropped a decent 56.3% in its second frame to win with an estimated $37 million, followed by 28 Years Later with $30 million and Pixar's Elio with $21 million in second and third places, respectively. Elio's box office debut was the worst opening weekend for any modern film in Pixar history, according to Variety. The debut is not only below Elemental, which debuted in June 2023 with $29.6 million, but below Pixar's first film ever, 1995's Toy Story, which opened in November 1995 with $29.1 million. Elio - which follows a young boy mistaken as an ambassador for Earth after he invited aliens to come visit - received a good marks from critics and moviegoers on Rotten Tomatoes, with ratings of 84% and 91% respectively. The film earned only $14 million in overseas markets for an abysmal worldwide total of $35 million. The film opened in 3,750 theaters, earning a middling $5,600 per-screen average, with the film's box office projections putting it between $25 million and $30 million, though fans clearly didn't show up as much as previously believed. Elio was produced under a $150 million budget, and with a $35 million global debut, it seems unlikely that it could turn a profit, barring some kind of box office miracle. 'This is a weak opening for Pixar,' says David A. Gross, who runs the FranchiseRe movie consulting firm. 'These would be solid numbers for another original animation film, but this is Pixar, and by Pixar's remarkable standard, the opening is well below average,' Gross added. How to Train Your Dragon remained perched at the top of the box office its second week in theaters, in spite of some tough new competition. The live-action adventure starring Miles Thames, Nico Parker and Gerard Butler earned less than half of the $84 million it collected on its opening weekend, but garnered a respectable $37 million in ticket sales. Fans of the franchise breathed fire into international showings, which earned an additional $53 million, for a global total so far of $358,189,295. Second place went to the fright flick 28 Years Later, which earned $30 million from 3,444 theaters for a solid $8,710 per-screen average. Jodie Comer and Aaron Taylor-Johnson star in the apocalyptic thriller about a group of survivors living on an island nearly three decades after a rage virus has infected most of the world. It will be interesting to see how long this newcomer remains popular at the box office as critics have given the fright flick a strong 89-percent rating on Rotten Tomatoes, whereas audiences gave it a much less enthusiastic 65-percent score. 28 Years Later is the sequel to 2002's 28 Days Later, with Alex Garland returning as scriptwriter and Danny Boyle reprising his role as director. The thriller scared up some $45 million domestically and nearly $30 million overseas for a debut total of $74.9 million. Disney's live action Lilo & Stitch dropped to fourth place, earning $9.7 million across the US. The family friendly romp has been one of the most successful of 2025 so far with global earnings of $910.3 million, coming in behind A Minecraft Movie with $953.5 million and the Chinese animated fantasy film, Ne Zha 2, which has earned nearly $2 billion worldwide. Mission: Impossible - The Final Reckoning rounded out the top five with $6.55 million domestically. The last film in the Tom Cruise lead franchise never found its footing at the box office after debuting in a distant second behind Lilo & Stitch. International audiences have been more welcoming to the film, paying more than $362 million to see the nearly three hour long action flick for a global total of $540.8 million. Second place went to the fright flick 28 Years Later. Aaron Taylor-Johnson stars in the apocalyptic thriller which earned $45 million domestically and nearly $30 million overseas for a debut total of $74.9 million Materialists, the romantic comedy starring Dakota Johnson, Pedro Pascal and Chris Evans plummeted from third place to sixth its second weekend in theaters. Critics loved the mature love story, but it hasn't caught on with audiences amidst all the competition from family friendly and action films. Materialists collected nearly 50-percent than its opening weekend take, pulling in a mere $5.8 million. The rom-com hasn't gained much traction around the planet either, making only an additional $7.5 million internationally. Ballerina, starring Ana De Armas as an assassin bent on revenge, followed in seventh place. The action thriller from the world of John Wick bowed this week with a little more then $4.5 million in ticket sales. In spite of good reviews from audiences, Ballerina has not fared well with ticket buyers domestically, although on the international stage it's collected another $49.7 million for a worldwide total of more than $100 million so far. Karate Kid: Legends starring the original 'Kid' Ralph Macchio along with martial arts master Jackie Chan waxed on at number eight with $2.4 million in ticket sales Karate Kid: Legends starring Jackie Chan and Ralph Macchio waxed on at number eight with $2.4 million in ticket sales. Final Destination: Bloodlines crash landed at number nine with $1.88 million. Newcomer Kuberaa, the latest offering from India, debuted at number 10. The morality tale about a beggar who undergoes a radical transformation to make his way in the world garnered $1.75 million. Brad Pitt will speed into the box office race next weekend with the highly anticipated F1: The Movie, along with the scary M3gan 2.0, giving some competition the family friendly offerings that have made their mark on the summer blockbuster season.