She recently cited Australia's culture of 'internalised misogyny' as the reason why she was criticised for wearing racy outfits on The Bachelor.
It's an area she's been interested in career-wise for a few years now.Do we track them down and doxx them? "Send me a date card already you feminist icon.""Things I got slut shamed for on #thebachelorau: this bikini, my skort at hometowns, multiple cocktail party gowns, kissing matt 'without a date' and at a cocktail party (out of sight of anyone), pashing Matt in various locations with varying degrees of intensity, honestly admitting that I wanted to have sex with a man I was dating for 10 weeks and all around just "using sexuality to manipulate Matt,"" she wrote on September 24. The 22-year-old blonde beauty revealed her plan to open up about ‘standard girl problems’ on social media after the finale of Big Brother earlier this week. "This is something I did not expect in 2019. Personally I don't think so.Although the trolling has largely subsided since the show wrapped up, Abbie still receives at least one troll message per day.
View the profiles of people named Abbie Chatfield. After the show’s finale aired, with Bachelor Matt Agnew choosing Chelsie McLeod, the vitriol and abuse against the 24-year-old Brisbane woman escalated from harsh negative comments and slut-shaming to violent death threats. Well said @abbiechatfield."Your source for entertainment news, celebrities, celeb news, and celebrity gossip. The last time Mamamia spoke to Abbie Chatfield, The Bachelor finalist was dealing with the harsh fall-out of her appearance on the reality show. I’m very lucky to have a great group of girlfriends and we hang out and we have really great conversations about really serious things or even taboo topics.Now, every Tuesday, Abbie discusses taboo topics – like sex and female masturbation – with her 130,000+ strong Instagram following.Along the way, however, some of the responses have been surprising.“I have worked really hard on letting people see the real me and being vulnerable and open to try and humanise myself beyond the character that was on screens,” she added.It's these responses that have led Abbie to reflect on how women are educated about sex."We evidently have really poor sex education," she said.Not only were the other women on the show seemingly offended by Abbie’s confidence, but even more so were the viewers.As her appearance on the show was announced on Thursday night, Abbie posted on Instagram, reminding her followers that reality TV contestants are real people who read comments about themselves."I had a pretty standard sex education but a lot of young women don’t feel like they have the power to own their sexuality and they’re kind of ashamed about it because of how we’re conditioned to feel about our sexuality," she added.“These messages 100 per cent lead to mental health issues, which can, in turn, lead to suicidal thoughts and suicide itself. A lot of the time it will be friends or it might be an expert," Abbie said."[Talking about sex] has always been a norm for me.