Honey Ross has some very famous parents - Jonathan Ross and Jane Goldman - but her own journey to self-discovery has been a tough one.
Now a screenwriter and body positivity activist, size 18 Honey speaks out against diet culture and advocates self-love.
But she has not always felt this confident.
As a teen, Honey would desperately try to lose weight, with her heartbroken parents putting her on diets in a bid to help her.
But Honey, now 24, admits the diets were just "toxic" and the only way she eventually found peace was accepting her beautiful curves and giving up trying to force her natural weight to drop.
She told The Sun : "I hated myself. I hated my body.
Get all the biggest showbiz news straight to your inbox. Sign up for the free Mirror Showbiz newsletter.

"I remember saying, ‘I’m miserable. Can I go on a diet?’
"And [my parents] facilitated that. I could see that it broke their hearts to see their daughter so full of self-loathing."
She may have looked as if she had it all - celebrity parents raising her in a £4million London home - but devastatingly, Honey began to obsess over her weight when she was just 12 years old.
Speaking on Loose Women, she explained how her parents had tried to "solve the problem" by helping her lose weight - but that's not what parents should be doing.
"From a young age, I felt I didn’t have any control over my image," she explained.
"I felt I didn’t have a place to carve out my own identity. I found Instagram and I was like, 'I can express myself and show people who I really am.'
"It was a way for me to figure myself out better. I have parents who were raised in the same society as all of us."

Honey continued: "They saw me, a teenage girl coming home saying, 'I hate my body.'
"They tried to give me solutions to a problem I brought to them, which was to lose weight.
"They presented me with diets and diets, as we know, don’t work and are absolutely toxic."
She added: "My advice to parents is keep that as far away from your children as possible, if you want them to have a good relationship with food and their bodies growing up do not shame them."
Honey even asked for a personal trainer for her 14th birthday as she tried to rescue her teenage years from trolls who would tear into her online.
She admitted to The Sun that comments made about her on social media after photos had appeared of her at red carpet events with her parents had a detrimental effect on her self-esteem.
Honey has two siblings – Harvey, 27, and Betty Kitten, 30, both of whom largely stay out of the limelight, while her father Jonathan is a famous talk show host and her mother Jane is a screenwriter and author.

Honey revealed being a teenager had already left her feeling "insecure" and the cruel comments had given her "a real insight into a dark side of human nature."
Honey said this reinforced her "worst fears about how people thought I was hideous written down.”
It reinforced her obsession with her weight, and led to her keeping an "obsessive food diary".
By the time she was 17, Honey had turned to a low-carb keto diet but admitted that she got "such bad dysmorphia that I became convinced my friends wouldn’t be able to wrap their arms around me to hug me because I was so big".
Her parents would do their best to reassure her, pointing out how intelligent and cool she was, but it was no use.
She started losing weight but still felt "quiet and miserable" especially when her "size six brunette" friends would complain about their own weight issues.
Honey said that her friends would say "I feel so fat and disgusting today" while she would be "standing there, actually fat."
She would wonder, "What does that make me?" and think, "Oh my God, this is brutal".
But when she was 18, Honey had an epiphany.
"From the age of 18 I turned my views around and am comfortable in my fat body," she told the Loose Women panelists.
"You can be fat and happy!"
Now, Honey is committed to spreading self-love and raising awareness of how toxic our fixation on weight can be, and the message is certainly getting out there as she boasts more than 50,000 Instagram followers and hosts a podcast called Body Protest.
She told listeners: "In our society it is a protest to love our bodies.
"We are constantly bombarded with messages to be thinner, smoother, tauter, whiter, leaner and somehow like, 'Hey, we woke up like this!' Well, we’ve had enough."
Do you have a story to share? We want to hear all about it. Email us at yourmirror@mirror.co.uk