Paige DeSorbo has made it clear that she's a "breadwinner." The Summer House cast member has found career success as a podcaster, touring across the nation with her show, in addition to being a social media influencer and author. In the process, she has been transparent about her financial situation, including how she received help during her early days of her career.
Paige appeared on the podcast Nice Talk with Nikki Ogunnaike in June 2024, where she opened up about how her mom, Kim DeSorbo, helped her move to New York City after graduating from college, which had been a longtime dream of hers. Although she had no idea what she wanted to do, she knew she would be able to make her dreams come true.
"I said to my mom, 'Look, I'll make a deal with you. If you help me move to NYC, and help me financially, and help me figure out what I wanna do, I promise you, I will get a job within six months.' And we didn't even tell my dad anything," the Giggly Squad podcast host recalled. "So me and her had to kind of come up with this plan to convince him to even let me move to NYC. And obviously, because we're brilliant, we figured it out. We, like, made him think it was his idea."
In an April interview with The New York Times, Paige reiterated that her parents paid her rent in Manhattan until she was able to land her first ever job as an assistant.
How living in NYC empowered Paige DeSorbo to make her own money
On the Nice Talk podcast, Paige also opened up about growing up "extremely privileged," asking her parents for money when she needed it. "And it was always my dad who would give me money and help me out," she noted to podcast host Nikki Ogunnaike. "Then when I got into my 20s, especially in NYC, I watched money be thrown around in a very different way than I was used to."
She revealed that she saw men offering to fly women out to places or pay for things, which made her "uncomfortable."
"I didn't really like it," she added. "And I think it was one of my biggest motivators to working because I was like, 'I want to do X, Y, and Z, but I want to do it when I want to do it. And I want it to be under my terms. And I want to go when I want to go. And I want to leave when I want to leave.' So I need to make enough money to do exactly what you're doing, but you're not in charge of that."