Kaley Cuoco on Ashley Tisdale's Mom Group Drama: 'Just Leave, Baby'
Photo Credit: Charles Sykes/Bravo via Getty Images

Kaley Cuoco on Ashley Tisdale’s Mom Group Drama: ‘Just Leave, Baby’

Kaley Cuoco is sharing her thoughts on Ashley Tisdale‘s mom group controversy. In an essay, Tisdale opened up about leaving her group of mothers. The Disney alum called the members out for allegedly excluding her from the hangouts. During her appearance on Watch What Happens Live with Andy Cohen, Cuoco gave advice to Tisdale.

Kaley Cuoco shares her opinion on Ashley Tisdale’s mom group drama on Bravo’s WWHL

On WWHL, Kaley Cuoco gave her opinion on Ashley Tisdale’s mom group drama. The host brought up a fan question on what she thinks about the mom group expose since she has a group of her own. The “Big Bang Theory” star answered, “I mean, if you don’t like being part of a group, just leave, baby.” The 40-year-old added that one shouldn’t talk about it and simply find a new group.

In January, Tisdale’s article titled “Breaking Up With My Toxic Mom Group” was published on The Cut. The “High School Musical” star revealed feeling, “not cool enough,” after getting excluded from hangouts. She also remembered, “sitting alone one night after getting [her] daughter to bed … feeling totally lost as to what [she] was doing ‘wrong’ to be left out.” The mom of two texted in the group, “This is too high school for me, and I don’t want to take part in it anymore.”

However, she “never considered the moms to be bad people [except for] maybe one.” Nevertheless, Tisadale left the group after the “dynamic stopped being healthy and positive.” She was against the group’s “ugly,” “mean girl behavior,” and isolation. This behavior ended up leaving her “hurt, drained, and left out.” The 40-year-old continued, “I realized that there were group text chains that didn’t include everyone. This “led to cliques forming within the larger group.”

She shared she stopped feeling part of the group “after the third or fourth time of seeing social media photos of everyone else at a hangout,” without her. While Tisdale did not take names, many felt she was hinting at Meghan Trainor, Hillary Duff, and Mandy Moore. This was because she stopped following Duff and Moore on Instagram, but reps for Tisdale shared they weren’t targets of the essay.

Originally written by Ritika Singh on Reality Tea.

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