Katie Price: Nothing to Hide review – fascinating and exhausting
Katie Price: Nothing to Hide review – fascinating and exhausting

Katie Price's new documentary series Katie Price: Nothing to Hide premieres Wednesday at 9pm on Sky Documentaries, offering a revealing portrait that goes beyond the headlines. The four-part series, produced by Louis Theroux's Mindhouse, focuses on Price's first 23 years in the first episode, which was available for preview.

Early life and family insights

The documentary features interviews with Price's mother Amy, stepfather Paul, and brother Dan, who express a mix of exasperation and tender resignation. Amy says, "I feel somewhere inside her there's a sweet little girl. I wish she'd come out every now and again." Price herself acknowledges her flaws, stating, "I know I've hurt people deeply. But this is the thing with me. I am what I am."

Surgeries and self-image

Price, 48, discusses her numerous breast surgeries, saying, "I never wanted natural. I wanted stuck-on. I wanted fake." She reflects on her younger self, calling photos of her at 21 "ugly" despite her beauty at the time. Only a childhood photo evokes tenderness: "Gentle eyes. Innocent. Had no idea what was coming."

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Chaos and resilience

The series shows Price as an agent of chaos, from promoting her eighth novel on horseback to relationships with men like Dane Bowers, whom she calls "the love of my life." Despite the drama, her directness about her lifelong neediness—"I look for in men what was missing from my real dad"—makes her sympathetic. The documentary captures her rummaging through a garage with a box labeled "SURGERY AND EXES," highlighting her unfiltered approach.

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