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Keke Palmeris crediting her parents for how they helped her navigate her acting career.In a new episode of theLos Angeles Times’The Envelopepodcast, Palmer, 29, said her parents ensured she was never “exploited in ways that made me feel less as a person” while she grew up as a child actor.“The exploitation, I don’t think it’s always this terrifying thing,” Palmer told co-host Yvonne Villareal in the episode, after speaking about themes of exploitation at the heart of her most recent movie,Jordan Peele’sNope. “I think sometimes, many of the times, it is, but other times, it’s just kind of like a part of it.“Palmer went on to explain that she thinks “everybody’s exploited in the entertainment industry.““I think it becomes dangerous when you are exploited against your will or you are exploited in the ways that you do not wish,” she told the outlet. “You look at a situation like Britney Spears, and she was exploited in ways that just totally were unfair and not aligned with probably what she truly wanted as a young woman.“TOMMASO BODDI/AFP via Getty"Whereas me, I think my parents definitely did do a good job at making sure that I was not exploited in ways that made me feel less as a person,” she added.Palmer noted during the podcast appearance that the nature of exploitation in Hollywood is shown inNopethroughSteven Yeun’sNopecharacter, who “goes from being the exploited Asian kid on a very popular American television show to then exploiting himself as an adult, years later.“Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE’s free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from juicy celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.“When you look at my roles and the things that I played, especially as a kid, they were roles that could only make me feel proud about who I am,” Palmer said, referencing her roles as a child in 2006’sAkeelah and the Bee, 2007’sJump In, 2008’sThe Longshotsand her television role inTrue Jackson, VP.“So they really, they were careful about the ways in which I was being put on display that it was something that in the end, that I could be proud of,” the actor added of her parents' approach to her roles growing up.EverettPalmer noted during the interview that both her parents were actors themselves before helping her make it in the industry.“I became the financial breadwinner because my career was bringing in the most money,” she told the outlet of her childhood. “And my parents wanted to support me but they couldn’t have their own jobs because their own jobs would not even allow them to really be able to sustain a stable household.”

Keke Palmeris crediting her parents for how they helped her navigate her acting career.

In a new episode of theLos Angeles Times’The Envelopepodcast, Palmer, 29, said her parents ensured she was never “exploited in ways that made me feel less as a person” while she grew up as a child actor.

“The exploitation, I don’t think it’s always this terrifying thing,” Palmer told co-host Yvonne Villareal in the episode, after speaking about themes of exploitation at the heart of her most recent movie,Jordan Peele’sNope. “I think sometimes, many of the times, it is, but other times, it’s just kind of like a part of it.”

Palmer went on to explain that she thinks “everybody’s exploited in the entertainment industry.”

“I think it becomes dangerous when you are exploited against your will or you are exploited in the ways that you do not wish,” she told the outlet. “You look at a situation like Britney Spears, and she was exploited in ways that just totally were unfair and not aligned with probably what she truly wanted as a young woman.”

TOMMASO BODDI/AFP via Getty

US actress Keke Palmer arrives for the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences' 13th Annual Governors Awards at the Fairmont Century Plaza in Los Angeles on November 19, 2022.

“Whereas me, I think my parents definitely did do a good job at making sure that I was not exploited in ways that made me feel less as a person,” she added.

Palmer noted during the podcast appearance that the nature of exploitation in Hollywood is shown inNopethroughSteven Yeun’sNopecharacter, who “goes from being the exploited Asian kid on a very popular American television show to then exploiting himself as an adult, years later.”

Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE’s free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from juicy celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

“When you look at my roles and the things that I played, especially as a kid, they were roles that could only make me feel proud about who I am,” Palmer said, referencing her roles as a child in 2006’sAkeelah and the Bee, 2007’sJump In, 2008’sThe Longshotsand her television role inTrue Jackson, VP.

“So they really, they were careful about the ways in which I was being put on display that it was something that in the end, that I could be proud of,” the actor added of her parents' approach to her roles growing up.

Everett

JUMP IN!, Corbin Bleu, Keke Palmer, Laivan Greene, Shanica Knowles

Palmer noted during the interview that both her parents were actors themselves before helping her make it in the industry.

“I became the financial breadwinner because my career was bringing in the most money,” she told the outlet of her childhood. “And my parents wanted to support me but they couldn’t have their own jobs because their own jobs would not even allow them to really be able to sustain a stable household.”

source: people.com