Allison Holker is taking a LOT of heat since announcing she was releasing a memoir spilling all the tea about her husband Stephen "tWitch" Boss, who took his own life in 2023.
tWitch's family and friends have dragged her online over her recent People magazine interview, and most recently former contestants from the reality competition series So You Think You Can Dance have aired their grievances. For those unaware, like tWitch, Allison got her start as a contestant on SYTYCD and also appeared as a judge alongside Jojo Siwa and Maksim Chmerkovskiy.
via: TooFab
So You Think You Can Dance alums are weighing in on Allison Holker's recent comments about her late husband, Stephen "tWitch" Boss, while promoting her upcoming memoir.
In an interview with PEOPLE for its latest cover story, Holker -- who discussed her new book, This Far: My Story of Love, Loss, and Embracing the Light -- opened up about how she allegedly discovered a "cornucopia" of Boss' drug paraphernalia in their closet while "picking out an outfit" for him to wear for his funeral. The Ellen DeGeneres Show co-executive producer, SYTYCD alum, and longtime DJ died by suicide at age 40 in December 2022.
After her interview began circulating online, including Holker herself sharing a clip on her social media, several So You Think You Can Dance stars called out Holker on social media, slamming the fellow professional dancer.
Courtney Ann Platt (née Galiano) -- who reportedly was a longtime friend of Boss and Holker, and appeared alongside the former on Season 4 of SYTYD -- went off on Holker in an Instagram post, referencing PEOPLE's interview with her that featured the headline: "Stephen 'tWitch' Boss' Widow Allison Holker Discovered His Drug Addiction in 'Very Scary' Moment Before Funeral."
In a lengthy caption, Platt criticized Holker over her comments, and seemingly her deciding to write a memoir at all, calling her actions "by far the the most tacky, classless, opportunistic act" she's ever seen.
"Anyone who knows me, knows I go straight to source during a conflict and handle my business but since there’s clearly no shame in being so public, I haven’t said a word in two years but here I go," Platt began in her message.
"I was there the moment you both connected, I was there the day you got engaged, I stood by your side on your wedding day, I was in your home the day he died. I was by your side because your husband was my family," she claimed. "It didn’t matter how often we spoke, how often we saw each other. We were bonded IVever."
Platt continued, "This is by far the most tacky, classless, opportunistic act I have ever seen in my entire life. We all had to sign some weird NDA to attend his funeral (even his own mother who you’ve treated like garbage this entire time and let’s just remember you wouldn’t have even had a husband if it wasn’t for her) not to share anything or ruin his name as if that was on anyone’s mind in the first place and here you go and write a book with all the dirty laundry smearing his name and attempting to dim the bright loyal, loving, light that was your husband, my friend. Whether any of it is true or not is actually beside the point."
She also accused Holker of removing her married last name from her social media profiles two days after Boss' passing.
"This is how you protect the 'Boss name' you so quickly dropped on your social media platforms 48 hours after he passed? His legacy? This is how you protect his children from any further humiliation, hurt and despair?" Platt added of Holker, who shared kids Weslie, 16, Maddox, 8, and Zaia, 5, with Boss. "This is what you want them to remember about him?"
She then blasted Holker for allegedly "mov[ing] on," "living [her] life" and getting on "every carpet [she] can get on, every celebrity row [she] can sit in, every magazine [she] can be in."
"And you needed to do this? Get a journal, a therapist, a friend…but publishing a book shamelessly sharing the pages of your husband’s journal?" Platt said. "People magazine? What a joke."
Platt concluded her post by accusing Holker of launching a "smear campaign" of her husband.
"Yes, he took his own life which is a fact all of us still can’t fathom and he was clearly having mental health issues, hurting so deeply and this is your example of empathy? Of your love" she wrote. "This smear campaign for a buck is absolutely not what he would have ever wanted. No matter how bad he was hurting. Not for second. You’re a living, breathing bulldozer. Stick to your own demons. Shame on you Allison, shame on your money hungry team. Let my friend Rest in Peace not your PR."
Chelsea Hightower -- who also appeared on Boss' season of SYTYCD -- backed up Platt's words, taking to her Instagram Stories.
Alongside a screenshot of Platt's post, Hightower wrote, "I've known Allison since I was an early teen, and seeing her choose to share such deeply personal details about Twitch's struggles feels so disappointing and inappropriate. Twitch was an incredibly kind and loving man who always looked out for others, making everyone feel included and valued, including myself"
"He deserves to be remembered for the light he brought into this world, not reduced to his struggles. RI actually peace. @sir_twitch_alot you are missed and loved by so man," she continued in her statement, adding that she shared Platt's "words because I feel they speak to the heart of the situation."
Meanwhile, Season 7 So You Think You Can Dance winner, Lauren Froderman, also posted Platt's Instagram post to her Instagram Stories.
"i haven't said much because i struggle with knowing whether it's my place or not but this is just not the was to go about things," Froderman wrote. "stephen twitch boss was loved by soooo many and my heart is BROKEN with how things have been unfolding and this just feels cruel and wrong on so many levels. thank you courtney for speaking up and giving me the courage to echo that i do not support this."
"twitch you are still a light to so many and we love and miss you dearly," she concluded.
This comes as one of Boss' cousins, Darielle, has been slamming Holker online following her interview with PEOPLE, going off on Holker on X, formerly Twitter.
"Yeah idgaf about an NDA. This crazy woman made me and his actual family including sign an NDA just to even attend the funeral," she wrote in one post alongside a post about the PEOPLE interview. "She’s been trying to tarnish his legacy and refuses to let the Boss family see the children. Only to exploit and LIE on my cousin. Hell no."
"I’m so tired of keeping my f--king mouth shut bro. You did our family so mf dirty," she added in another message post.
Taking to her Instagram Story on Wednesday, Allison Holker defended herself from her late husband's friends, family and fans.
She wrote that her "only intention" in writing her book was "to share my own story as well as part of my life with Stephen to help other people."
"Just like you, I never really knew what happened, and even as I am trying to put the pieces together, I will never really know," she continued, saying her "intention is to celebrate the love and life I shared with Stephen and our three beautiful children, and also the more complex aspects of both our lives."
She also said she hoped her story could help others "catch some red flags that I missed before it's too late."
Per Holker, all the proceeds from her book are going to a mental health organization she started in her late husband's honor, Move with Kindness.
"I believe that if Stephen were able to choose, he would choose to have his story told if it meant saving even one life," she concluded. "Much love to all those who have supported our family these many years."
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