‘They put cigarettes in her drink’: Kendall Jenner was ‘bullied’ at NYFW by fellow Models who ‘thought she didn’t deserve to be there’
By Shyam Dodge for MailOnline
Published: 16:36 EST, 17 September 2024 | Updated: 18:02 EST, 17 September 2024
While Kendall Jenner is taking the fashion world by the storm, she has her fair share of haters.
The 18-year-old’s meteoric rise as a professional runway model has sparked the ire and resentment of some of her colleagues, according to a new report.
At New York Fashion Week, Kendall was allegedly bullied by her fellow models, who even went so far as to put cigarettes out in her drink.
Mean girls: Kendall Jenner was reportedly bullied by her fellow Models at New York Fashion Week
A source at NYFW told In Touch Weekly: ‘The Other Models worked so hard to get a spot on the runway and didn’t think it was fair that she was there.’
And in true Mean Girls fashion, some of the Models began taking their resentment out on the young reality star.
‘They started acting b****y,’ the insider said, ‘Some even put out their cigarettes in Kendall’s drink!’
Mean girls: Apparently the Other Models didn’t think it was fair that Kendall was there after they had worked so hard to get a spot on the runway
Special treatment: The star had cigarettes put into her drink by jealous models, according to a source
Working it: The 18-year-old has had a meteoric rise in the fashion world
Meanwhile, the model recently revealed she must "work harder" if she wants to be taken seriously by the fashion world.
She said: "I want to be high fashion. I want to be taken seriously.
"People think that this [success] just came to me. But it didn’t. What I have has almost worked against me."
Sister love: The model pictured with her siblings Kylie Jenner and Kim Kardashian at the Teen Choice Awards in Los Angeles
Kendall also explained that her reality television roots had made it difficult for her during castings.
She added: "People didn’t take me seriously as a model…I went on castings and some people weren’t feeling me because of my name. But it was great when people didn’t recognise me. I was like, ‘Thank you. Please don’t recognise me.’"