Miranda Cosgrove Recalls Awkward iCarly Fan Encounter
Apr 30, 2024
Miranda Cosgrove Recalls Awkward iCarly Fan Encounter
In the 2000s, Miranda Cosgrove was one of Hollywood’s best-known child stars. And now, at 30 years old, her iconic shows are being discovered by a whole new generation of viewers.
While appearing on Wednesday’s episode of Live with Kelly and Mark, Miranda looked back at her first-ever movie role in School of Rock when she was just 9 years old, prompting Kelly Ripa to point out that she’s barely changed since she made her acting debut.
In response, Miranda told the story of a recent interaction with a young fan who’d recently stumbled upon Nickelodeon’s iCarly, in which she starred as a teenager from 2007 to 2012.
“It’s funny because there was a moment when a lot of young kids didn’t really know who I was because [iCarly] hadn’t been on for a while,” she began. “And then Netflix got the show and they started playing the old seasons.”
So, with a whole new generation of kids watching her teenage self on iCarly, Miranda recalled that a newer fan she met on a shopping trip to Target was a little surprised to see that she’d grown up.
“There’s a little boy just kind of looking at me in the toy aisle. He kept looking up at me. He was, like, 7, and I thought, oh my gosh, he must watch the show!” she said. “And then he kind of kept following me around. And finally, I thought he was going to say he watched. Instead, he was like, ‘You got old!’”
In light of the fact that Miranda’s hardly changed in the years since the original iCarly series ended, Kelly — understandably — reacted in complete shock, prompting the Drake & Josh star to note that “kids are so honest.”
As you’ll probably know, the OG iCarly cast reunited in 2021 for a Paramount+ reboot of the popular kids’ show.
Even though the reboot was canceled in 2023 after three seasons, the show was received well by viewers — particularly those who grew up watching the OG show in the 2000s and 2010s.
Publisher: Source link
Blue Moon Review | Flickreel
Even if you’re not a musical theatre buff, chances are that you’ve at least heard of Rodgers and Hammerstein thanks to Oklahoma!, The King and I, and The Sound of Music. People are less familiar with Rodgers and Hart, specifically…
Nov 9, 2025
This Pointless Character Death Fails To Do Eddie Justice
Coming off of last week's phenomenal episode, and with the promise of an episode centered on my favorite character this week, my expectations were sky-high high for 9-1-1's latest episode. Sadly, though, Season 9, Episode 5, "Día de los Muertos"…
Nov 9, 2025
Sean Baker Collaborator Shin Ching-Tsou’s Debut Is An Honest, Darling Challenge Of Patriarchal Norms
There's an incandescent sweetness to Left-Handed Girl, the solo directorial debut from long-time Sean Baker collaborator Shin Ching-Tsou. Co-written and edited by him, the film is nonetheless distinctively Ching-Tsou's, a romantically funny rebuke of patriarchal conventions and Taiwanese traditionalism. Centering…
Nov 7, 2025
The Twits Review: Chaotic, Overstuffed, and Uneven
Phil Johnston’s The Twits is an animated musical comedy that should, in theory, have been a perfect playground for anarchic imagination. Roald Dahl’s 1980 novel was a lean, nasty little morality tale about cruelty and comeuppance — a darkly funny…
Nov 7, 2025







