I'm a mom of two girls. And my daughters see me… I never want to show them anything that I wouldn't want them to represent as a black woman.
Shaunie O'Neal
I never wanted to lose who I am, my character or my integrity for the sake of Hollywood.
I have an ex that's just all up in my business every day.
I'm not going to put them all in a box and say they all cheat. There are some good guys and I have met some good guys that play basketball.
If someone at VH1, the powers that be, said, 'Shaunie, we want you to completely do your family show,' would I do cartwheels on over to it? Absolutely, because that is probably the most fun I've ever had shooting anything ever so I would totally be fine with that and just do my EP but, yeah.
For all reality TV, and all the viewers of reality TV, just be entertained. Don't invest your feelings, your heart, your soul into reality TV. It is entertainment. And that's all that it should be.
I'm never one to act a fool. Not at home and not in public.
I just feel like people are who they are.
It's a crazy world, and I just want to remain true to myself, if that means I remain true to my core group of friends that I've had for umpteen years and being a mommy.
It's all realistic, if you get a group of ladies and you stick them together almost every day for three, four months you're going to have some catfights.
I'm scared if the cops pull me over.
I have older boys and two of them are driving which is scary to me just because of the police nowadays.
I can't control what everyone else does, I can't control anybody else's behavior, but I can control mine.
I really like Angel Love.
I mean, hell, when I pitched 'Basketball Wives' I was still married and I had no intentions of being on the show, I just was producing it and creating it, and that was it.
It's not ok to make up stories about someone's life and you haven't even spoken with them.
I think a lot of people can come across looking messier than they are, but that's what reality TV is unfortunately.
The kids and I kind of learned about the divorce at the same time. So that was hard. That was probably the worst part of the whole thing, was being able to deal with how hurt the whole kids were.
You don't take a reality show and make it a movie. At least I wouldn't.
It was important for me to have other outlets outside of 'Basketball Wives' to represent myself and who I really am and what I really would like to put out there.
It's my own conscience that gets to me more so than anybody thinking about me. I think too much.
I feel respected in the back of my mind.
I'm the black Demi Moore.
Once you let things go, they don't make you mad anymore.
It's a good feeling to know that I'm able to give my kids more and be a better person to be around.
Don't go watching reality TV thinking your going to find a role model.
I'm coming out of a long term marriage and I don't want to jump into anything too serious or too much, too quick.
Every man has a pattern - I don't care what they say. They don't like to admit it, but they do.
In Shaquille's mind, I think I'm always going to be his wife even though that's not the case. The love is always there and he's one of my best friends. We have a great time together and our kids love us just being a family.
I don't know Ayesha Curry.
I don't believe in, 'she's a woman, she's a wife, be quiet and sit at home.'
Our ultimate goal with Real Models is to open a school and I would love to do it here in Miami, open up a charter school.