Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

'Boy Meets World' Star Reveals She Was Catfished At Age 12 By A Man Posing As A Young Girl

'Boy Meets World' Star Reveals She Was Catfished At Age 12 By A Man Posing As A Young Girl
JC Olivera/Getty Images

Danielle Fishel of the 90s coming-of-age sitcom Boy Meets World opened up about a harrowing experience interacting with a fan while she was working on the show when she was 12.

Fishel played Topanga Lawrence on the show between September 1993 and May 2000. She reprised her role in the 2014 sequel series Girl Meets World.


The former child star said in a recent Q&A session a grown man once posed as a child and catfished her.

Earlier this year, Fishel reunited with her former costars Rider Strong and Will Friedle to launch the Pod Meets World podcast to talk about their experiences being on the show as child stars.

In this week's installment, Fishel responded to a Q&A question in which a subscriber asked about who received the most fan mail.

The cohosts agreed that Strong–who played Cory Matthews’s best friend Shawn Hunter–was the most popular on the show when he was 14.

Fishel then shared her disturbing memory as a preteen actress on the show.

She recalled:

“When we first started getting fan mail, I also read them all and responded to them all."

Fisher said she connected with a fan who was in gymnastics, a sport Fishel said she once pursued prior to becoming a child actress.

“I got a letter in ’93 from a young girl and she included pictures of herself in it, and she was in gymnastics.”
“She wrote me this handwritten letter that she was a fan, and I wrote her back and she sent me another letter and we started this correspondence back and forth."

In the second letter she received, Fishel said the "girl" lived with her brother who was "several years older" than her and she described him as a "good-looking" guy.

She continued:

“I felt very close to her, and one of the things she talked about regularly was that both of her parents died when she was young and she lived with her older brother.”

The girl also included her phone number so Fishel could call her.

Fishel clarified her mother was participating in the correspondence.

“She’s reading all these letters as well and she’s aware of what I’m writing and she’s reading what this girl is writing to me, and my mom is like: ‘[It seems like] you would be friends'.”

When Fishel tried to make contact with her, she instead got the voicemail of a grown man, presumably the girl's brother since it was his home.

“They live in an apartment together, but her name isn’t anywhere on the voicemail," she said.

To which Strong weighed in and exclaimed:

“She doesn’t exist! She doesn’t exist—some guy pretending to be a girl, you got catfished!”

Fishel confirmed it was true, adding:

“The way it all came out is because I kept calling her, and I left my phone number and she wouldn’t call me back."
"Then we got a letter from her brother saying that she had died, and my mum woke up in the middle of the night and was like: ‘She never existed, it’s always been him!’”

Things, unfortunately, escalated from there.

The man who posed as the young fan apparently began showing up at Fishel's school and told people he was there to pick her up.


Buzzfeed/Facebook

Buzzfeed/Facebook

Buzzfeed/Facebook

Huffpost/Facebook

Fishel did not elaborate on how the situation was resolved.

Strong called the whole affair Fishel's first "stalker experience" before admitting as a teenager he also struggled with setting up "clear boundaries" with fans.

He recalled:

“I had girls calling my house when I was like 11, 12, because I was listed in the phone book—or my parents were, in my hometown."
“Back then, I would meet up with them. This was before Boy Meets World, this is when I was on Home Improvement or I had done local plays.”
“Girls would call the house and I’d meet them at an arcade, super awkward."
"At the time I was like, 'oh you like me, you saw me on TV, OK I’ll be your friend, let’s hang out, maybe I’ll have a crush on you too!'"
"In retrospect, it’s like, no, you have to create boundaries.”

More from Entertainment/tv-and-movies

Ariana Grande; 'Access Hollywood' reporters
@daydreamrem/X

Reporter's Tone-Deaf Question For Ariana Grande At Golden Globes Leaves Fans Stunned

An Access Hollywood reporter asked music icon and actor Ariana Grande a question that many shocked internet users thought was a major breach of social etiquette.

On Sunday, Grande represented team Wicked alongside castmates Cynthia Erivo, Jeff Goldblum, Michelle Yeoh, and director Jon M. Chu at the 82nd Golden Globes.

Keep ReadingShow less
Elon Musk
Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images

Elon Musk Calls Student Ableist Slur For Criticizing How Much 'Disinformation' He Spreads

Billionaire Elon Musk was widely condemned after he referred to a student on the platform by using the "r-word"—a known ableist slur—after the student called him out for being the "largest spreader of disinformation."

The R-word is a derogatory term derived from "mental retardation," which was once introduced in 1961 as a medical term for individuals with intellectual disabilities. However, the term has since been co-opted as an insult, widely used in everyday language.

Keep ReadingShow less
Nancy Mace; Jonathan Van Ness
Kent Nishimura/Getty Images; Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

Nancy Mace Gets Blunt Reminder After Criticizing 'Queer Eye' Star For Golden Globes Dress

Rep. Nancy Mace was called out after she criticized Jonathan Van Ness, the nonbinary star of the hit Netflix docuseries Queer Eye, for wearing a dress to the Golden Globes—except Mace has her own recent history with gender-bending fashion.

Since November, Mace has garnered national attention for her campaign against Democratic Representative Sarah McBride of Delaware, the first openly transgender person elected to Congress.

Keep ReadingShow less
The silhouette of a man leading against a wall.
men's white dress shirt

People Describe The Worst Pain They've Ever Felt In Their Life

It's often surprising just how much minor injuries can hurt.

Sometimes after we stub our toe, prick our fingers, or hit our funny bones we feel like we're in almost unbearable pain.

Keep ReadingShow less
Jeremy Strong
ETIENNE LAURENT/AFP via Getty Images

Jeremy Strong's Green Suit And Matching Bucket Hat At The Golden Globes Spark Hilarious Jokes

As always, the 2025 Golden Globes were full of memorable moments, but none have generated quite as much discourse as actor Jeremy Strong's red carpet outfit.

Strong won a Globe in 2022 for his role in HBO's Successionand was a nominee this year for his supporting role in the film The Apprentice.

Keep ReadingShow less