TikToker Miranda Derrick Addresses Allegations of Being in a Cult
Bethany Joy Lenz Names Alleged “Cult” She Belonged To
TikTok dancer Miranda Derrick is speaking out about her strained relationship with her family and their accusation that she joined an alleged cult.
The controversy surrounding the influencer, who rose to fame alongside her sister Melanie with their shared Wilking Sisters account, is depicted on the Netflix docuseries Dancing for the Devil: The 7M TikTok Cult, which premiered May 29. The family alleges in interviews that Miranda cut off ties with them three years ago after working with talent management company called 7M Films, run by Los Angeles church pastor Robert Shinn.
“I love my Mom, Dad and Melanie and they will forever be a part of my life,” Miranda, 27, wrote on her Instagram Stories June 4. “The truth is, we just don’t see eye to eye at this time. I believe that this documentary is a one-sided story. I gave my life to Jesus Christ in 2020 and asked my family for some space in the very beginning to collect my thoughts and process my new walk I wanted to take with God.”
She continued, “My parents and sister are not religious. They immediately called me going to church twice a week a ‘cult.'”
Miranda, who last week shared solo photos of herself at her sister’s wedding, added, “I have been getting together with them over the past couple years to make amends, move on and work things out as a family. This documentary has created a further challenge between us as I work to overcome this public attack.”
The docuseries featured interviews with dancers who left 7M Films and are in civil litigation with Shinn. In 2022, he filed a defamation lawsuit against a former church member, who denied the allegations. She countersued him, and along with several other former church members named as plaintiffs, alleged in that filing that “Shekinah is a cult operating under the disguise of a religious institution,” Rolling Stone reported. He has denied the allegations in court papers, NBC News reported. No charges have been filed and the case is ongoing.
On the docuseries, a few dancers alleged that Shinn encouraged people to cut off contact with family members in order to “save” them. One of the dancers alleged Miranda once told her she missed her family, but the pastor told her it wasn’t a good idea to see them. The influencer, she said, was “being brainwashed.”
On her Instagram Stories, Miranda responded, “No one likes to be portrayed as their brainwashed/not in control of her own life/shell of herself/human trafficked daughter/sister when that just isn’t the truth.”
She continued, “I can’t convince anyone to believe anything. I am just a woman trying to live my life. I am not a victim, I am not in any harm, I am not being abused. I’ve never asked my family or anyone else to ‘help’ me in any way. Respectfully, what I choose to do with my life is up to me.”
In a June 4 statement to E! News, 7M Films called the docuseries “a slanderous work of fiction, born from a failed extortion attempt, and invented for the sole purpose of gaining fame and fortune.”
The statement continued, “We will continue to pursue all legal remedies available to stop the spread of salacious lies and expect to be fully vindicated in court.”
7M Films had also said in a 2022 statement that there was no business affiliation between the company and Shinn’s Shekinah Church.
E! News has reached out to Shekinah Church for comment on the docuseries but has not heard back. Netflix declined to comment when reached by E!.
Miranda’s family had gone public with their story before. In 2022, after the family expressed their concerns about the influencer on Instagram, she stated on TikTok, in response to a user’s question, “No, I’m not in a cult. I’m in a house.”
Read on for more information about Dancing for the Devil: The 7M TikTok Cult…
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