Paris Hilton’s son Phoenix Barron is on the move!
The singer and reality star, 43, posted a reel on Instagram on Sunday, June 30, featuring the active 17-month-old walking while Hilton was posing during a photo shoot.
Phoenix looked comfy toddling around in a bear-printed sweatsuit and sneakers, along with a fuzzy brown bear hat that gave him cute little ears. He traveled between Hilton and his dad, Carter Reum, on the set.
“Baby P is free and ready to #Sliv 😂✨💖🎶 #ImFree #InfiniteIcon,” Hilton captioned the reel, which was set to her new song with Rina Sawayama, “I’m Free.”
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Text over the video featured Phoenix’s perspective.
“POV: me ever since I learned how to walk,” the caption read.
The clip showcasing Phoenix’s big milestone came days after Hilton posted a tribute to her younger child, daughter London Marilyn.
“London, l’ve waited my whole life for you my beautiful baby girl,” Hilton wrote in the caption of the Instagram post.
“My life now feels like every dream & 11:11 wish came true🥰🥲. You are my world, I love you endlessly my lil angel,” she added in the caption of a video of herself kissing her daughter and telling the 7-month-old that she loves her.
Hilton has been quite busy lately.
She’s an advocate for foster youth and testified on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., on Wednesday, June 26, about the need to strengthen child welfare protections. Addressing the House Ways and Means Committee, she cited her personal abuse experience, which she also detailed in her 2023 memoir.
On Saturday, Hilton shared on her Instagram Stories that she was spending a relaxing day off in Los Angeles admiring her birdhouses.
Paris Hilton has called for change to youth treatment facilities and described her own traumatic experience of alleged abuse before a US congressional committee.
The American socialite and businesswoman said she was “force-fed medications and sexually abused by staff” after being sent to a private youth facility in Utah as at a teenager.
Her testimony shines a light on the so-called “troubled teen industry”.
While some children are placed with relatives or foster families, others are sent to treatment centres that are essentially group homes for children – some of whom have complex medical or behavioural needs.
Hilton, 43, accused the industry, which is worth billions of dollars, of being more interested in making money than protecting and caring for the vulnerable children it is responsible for.
The former reality TV star is an outspoken advocate for children in youth facilities as well as those in the foster care system. She has previously spoken about her own experience through a book, documentary and interviews.
Hilton says that when she was 16 years old, she was taken by strangers from her bed in the middle of the night. Her school grades had been slipping, and her parents were worried about her behaviour.
But they “had no idea” what the facility was really like and were “continually being lied [to] and manipulated by the staff”, Hilton told the committee.
“They just thought it was going to be a normal boarding school,” she said. “And when I got there, there was no therapy. We would just constantly be torn down, abused, screamed and yelled at.”
All of her communication with the outside world was controlled, and there was always someone there when she spoke to her parents on the phone, Hilton testified.
“So if I said even one negative thing about the facility, they immediately would hang up the phone and then I would be punished and either physically beaten or thrown into solitary confinement,” she said.
Hilton said the “inhumane” treatment she endured will affect her for the rest of her life.
She is urging US lawmakers to pass a bill, called the Stop Institutional Child Abuse Act.
It would see the troubled teen industry federally managed, so that abuse reporting systems are more transparent and responsible. There would also be nation-wide guidance of best practices in the centres, so that the children’s diverse needs can be recognised and respected.
A new report from the Department of Health and Human Services found that many US states do not adequately keep track of how children in these facilities are being treated, nor record instances of abuse.
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