Los Angeles Times

‘Quiet on Set: The Dark Side of Kids TV’: 6 key takeaways from the documentary

Drake Bell attends a gala at the Beverly Hilton on Sept. 28, 2019, in Beverly Hills, California.

Beginning in the late ’90s, Nickelodeon flourished with back to back hits in the kids’ television space with shows like “All That,” “The Amanda Show” and more. Sitcoms like “Zoey 101,” “Drake & Josh” and “iCarly” followed, making the network a kids’ entertainment powerhouse.

“Quiet on Set: The Dark Side of Kids TV,” the upcoming ID documentary series airing over two nights beginning Sunday, pulls back the curtain on this golden era of children’s television to reveal that the realities behind the camera were nowhere near as perfect as one would hope.

The series spotlights prolific TV creator Dan Schneider and, as those who previously worked for him allege, his abuse of power; the multiple convicted pedophiles who worked on his hit Nickelodeon shows; and more about what happened behind the scenes through interviews with former child actors, parents and crew members. One of the biggest revelations, as revealed in a teaser, is former Nickelodeon star Drake Bell speaking about the abuse he says he endured from Brian Peck, an actor and dialogue coach on a number of Schneider-created shows, who was convicted in 2004 of child sex abuse.

These are some of the

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