Influencer lays bare the HORRORS of living in a shared ‘model apartment’ at age 16 – revealing she was forced to share ‘tiny, disgusting’ two-bedroom property with NINE other teens who all paid $3,000 A MONTH

Living in a house full of models sounds glamorous, but according to one former cover star, there’s only one word to describe it – “criminal”.

British-born Madeleine White, 28, who now lives in Los Angeles, recently revealed the truth about the life of the budding fashion star when she told her horror stories about the summer she spent living in a model two-bedroom apartment in New York . age 16 years.

“Models are the most disgusting people on planet Earth,” she said in a TikTok video, calling the $3,000-a-month apartment she shared with nine other teenagers and teens a “biohazard.”

Madeleine, who was previously signed to Ford Models and Nous Model Management, added that the only reason her parents let her work in New York during the summer was because she always had to have a chaperone living there.

British-born Madeleine White, 28, has shared her horror stories about the summer she spent living in a model two-bedroom apartment in New York when she was 16 years old.

British-born Madeleine White, 28, has shared her horror stories about the summer she spent living in a model two-bedroom apartment in New York when she was 16 years old.

She called the $3,000-a-month apartment she shared with nine other teenagers and teens a

She called the $3,000-a-month apartment she shared with nine other teenagers and teens a “biohazard.”

“Spoiler alert, it wasn’t,” she joked in the clip, which has now been viewed more than 841,000 times.

“Imagine my shock and horror when I arrive and realize that 10 girls are sleeping in a two-room apartment,” she recalled.

Madeleine said the larger bedroom had three sets of bunk beds, the smaller bedroom had two, and the third room housed a chaperone, “who I don’t think I’ve ever seen in the last two months,” she joked.

The model-turned-TikTok star admitted she wasn’t too surprised that the apartments were disgusting since everyone living in them was under 18.

“Most of the girls were younger than me, and I was 16,” she shared. “A lot of the Russian girls were 12, 13, 14 years old.”

The horrors began from the moment Madeline arrived, when she was shown her bed, made with “sheets with period stains.”

“None of the girls even said hello to me when I walked in,” she said. “I’m obviously already so nervous, so I have to go up to them and say, ‘Hey, where are the clean sheets?’

Madeleine said she was shown a closet that was filled with “crumpled piles of other dirty, dirty, dirty damn sheets.”

Madeleine said the larger bedroom had three sets of bunk beds and the smaller bedroom had two (similar to the one shown).

Madeleine said the larger bedroom had three sets of bunk beds and the smaller bedroom had two (similar to the one shown).

The horrors began from the moment Madeline (featured on the cover of Harper's Bazaar) arrived - when she was shown her bed, covered with

The horrors began from the moment Madeline (featured on the cover of Harper’s Bazaar) arrived – when she was shown her bed, covered with “sheets with period stains.”

The former model said that in the entire apartment there was not a single pot or pan that was not moldy, broken, and the stove and oven did not work.

The former model said that in the entire apartment there was not a single pot or pan that was not moldy, broken, and the stove and oven did not work.

The former model said that in the entire apartment there was not a single pot or pan that was not moldy, broken, and the stove and oven did not work.

“There wasn’t a single pot or pan in the entire apartment that wasn’t moldy and broken,” she listed. “The stove and oven didn’t work.”

She said girls’ alarms would go off all night, while others would talk to friends and boyfriends abroad all night.

Madeline then explained how model apartments are paid for, explaining that they are rented through modeling agencies and the rent is deducted from their income, meaning they don’t have to pay any money up front.

According to Madeleine, sometimes girls stay in apartments for years because they don’t earn enough money to leave.

“They literally couldn’t afford to move,” she explained. “They either never paid off the agency debt from that rent, or they barely paid it off but never made enough for a deposit somewhere else.”

Despite the initial horror, Madeline said she ended up “strangely enjoying” staying there, but couldn’t stay the same about her next model apartment experience, which was in Milan.

She said it was a “much nicer apartment” that she shared with only three other girls, but the hygiene of the others took Madeline by surprise.

“None of them believed in flushing the toilet,” she said.

“I talked to them,” she continued, adding that there were ‘pads, tampons, shit in the toilet every day.

Luckily for Madeleine, it was men’s fashion week while she was there, and her friends and then-boyfriend were also in Milan, so she was “almost never at home.”

“So, imagine my surprise when one day I get called into the agency (and) I’m told I’ve been kicked out,” she recalls.

Madeline said she ended up

Madeline said she ended up “weirdly loving” her New York apartment, but couldn’t stay the same about her next modeling apartment experience, which was in Milan (Madeline walked the runway in Tokyo in 2015).

“The agency tells me there was a party going on in the apartment,” she continued. “Several neighbors complained that there were parties going on several nights in a row, and the police were called several times.”

According to the model, her roommates conspired against her and everyone decided to blame her.

“I was terrified,” she said. “I started screaming at the agency, and in the end I’m pretty sure they believed me because they didn’t kick me out.”

“But this is just a fragment of my experience working in a model apartment,” she concluded the video.

the video was inspired by another former model who posted a video detailing the rude habits of a model she worked with who she says is now a highly successful Victoria’s Secret model.

Madeline's video was inspired by another former model's video detailing her horrific experience living in a modeling house.

Madeline’s video was inspired by another former model’s video detailing her horrific experience living in a modeling house.

In a clip that went viral, content creator Taylor said the model was the “It Girl” of the year (estimated to be about 10 years ago), calling her a “pathological liar” who is a “kleptomaniac with a personality disorder.”

Taylor said she and the other models in the apartment began noticing things were missing from their rooms, including “pens, cups and prescription medications,” and they later noticed she was carrying them.

However, the situation reached a boiling point when they went to search her room to retrieve their belongings.

“But that’s the gross part,” she continued. “She kept all her trash—dirty used tissues that she used to wipe her nose, her butt—there was poop in there.”

Taylor said she would keep all the trash in a suitcase kept in their apartment.

“It was so dirty,” she said. “That night we took her suitcase out onto the balcony and our apartment immediately smelled much less, it was so dirty.”

“We kicked her out that day,” she continued. “Now she’s super famous and doing well. She’s thriving and making so much money.”