Madison Prewett Breaks Silence on Porn Addiction That “Enslaved” Her

Oh, joy. Another celeb peeling back their soul for the podcast crowd. Bachelor alum Madison Prewett has finally dragged out the cringe-worthy details of her porn and masturbation addiction—because apparently we need more eye-rolling confessions in our feeds. On the June 23 episode of her Stay True podcast, Madison admitted she’s been “enslaved” by what she called “sexual sin” since middle school, and no amount of Bible verses or pep talks could break her free until adulthood.
Prewett, now 29 and married to Grant Troutt with a five-month-old daughter named Hosanna in tow, traced her habit back to a friend’s inappropriate TV show when she was just 13. “I had never watched anything like that before, and my body started feeling things that I had never felt,” she sighed, sounding way too mature for a teen stumble. Before she knew it, porn and masturbation weren’t just after-school curiosities; they started “bleeding into relationships” and pushing every boundary she swore she’d never cross. She confessed to feeling so trapped by shame that even “how much I loved Jesus” couldn’t yank her out of the cycle.
Fast-forward a decade of twisted self-recrimination, and by “the grace of God” plus some very “Godly community,” Madison claims she’s porn-free for ten years straight. She did the usual gospel trifecta: confess to God, fess up to believers, and rinse and repeat—still stressing it’s a daily choice. “I will not be mastered by my cravings,” she declared, as if she needs a podium for that pep talk.
If you’re dead set on more celebrity bedroom shockers, buckle up. Sports Illustrated model Brooks Nader’s sister spilled on the Chicks In the Office podcast that every time Brooks and her Dancing With the Stars partner Gleb Savchenko snuck off to rehearse, those trailer walls rattled like a wind machine on steroids. And Brooke Shields, in her memoir Brooke Shields Is Not Allowed to Get Old, whined about thinning hair, vaginal dryness, and the special lotions, pillows, and even tequila required to fake enthusiasm in the bedroom.
So there you have it—another round of TMI from people who probably needed professional help more than airtime. Did anyone expect a different outcome? No? Thought so. And that, dear reader, is why we can’t have nice things.
Sources: Celebrity Storm and E! News, Stay True Podcast, People Magazine, Chicks In the Office Podcast
Attribution: Creative Commons Licensed