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Jo Frost reveals she was bullied for three years during secondary school

We Need To Talk · Jo Frost: “I Was Bullied for 3 Years!” Her Breaking Point, and the 2026 Parenting Emergency · July 7, 2026
Jo Frost reveals she was bullied for three years during secondary school
We Need To Talk
We Need To Talk
Jo Frost: “I Was Bullied for 3 Years!” Her Breaking Point, and the 2026 Parenting Emergency
"I was bullied for 3 years, secondary school. I just remember one of the girls said something to me. I fucking hit her. She went away. It all stopped."
Child-rearing expert Jo Frost disclosed she endured three years of verbal bullying during secondary school by three girls who threatened classmates not to speak with her. The bullying only ceased when she physically defended herself. Frost admits professional conflict about the incident, acknowledging early intervention should prevent such outcomes, but also recognizes that sometimes real-life situations require self-defense when other measures fail.

About this episode

Paul PK Ugwu welcomes child-rearing expert Jo Frost for her second appearance on We Need To Talk, following their viral first conversation that garnered millions of views and tens of thousands of comments across platforms. Frost, best known for the reality series Supernanny, discusses the escalating crisis facing children and families in the UK and US, from social media addiction and cyberbullying to teen mob violence and parental accountability. She reveals she has counseled multiple bereaved families whose children died due to social media-related incidents, including cyberbullying and dangerous viral challenges, and forcefully advocates raising the minimum age for social media to 16. Frost condemns tech companies for exposing Western children to harmful content while Chinese platforms serve aspirational material, calling this a deliberate choice driven by profit. She endorses the UK government's plan to legally ban smartphones in schools and argues parents should face financial penalties when their teenagers vandalize property. On corporal punishment, Frost opposes the practice still legal in 19 US states and disproportionately affecting Black and neurodivergent children, calling instead for early intervention and family support systems. She warns about dangerous misinformation from unregulated baby sleep consultants contradicting safe sleep guidelines. In a personal revelation, Frost discloses she endured three years of bullying during secondary school that only ended when she physically defended herself, acknowledging the professional conflict this creates but affirming that real-life circumstances sometimes demand self-protection. Throughout, she emphasizes the need for grassroots investment in families, trained social workers, and leadership that genuinely values children, while calling for a UK ministry dedicated to children and families.

Key takeaways

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