Sylvester Stallone has broken his silence after claims Pamela Anderson made about him in her upcoming documentary.
The former Playboy model and Baywatch star, 55, is set to release her tell-all book - titled Love, Pamela - on January 31, as well as a Netflix documentary about her life on the same day, and the revelations and allegations within both have already started to make headlines.
Among them, Anderson claimed that she was once flashed by Tim Allen while filming for Home Improvement when she was 23 - allegations the actor has strongly denied.
In the documentary, Pamela: A Love Story, Anderson also alleged that Stallone, 76, had offered her a house and a Porsche in exchange for being his "number one girl".
She claimed, via the New York Post: "He offered me a condo and a Porsche to be his ‘No. 1 girl.' And I was like, ‘Does that mean there’s No. 2? Uh-uh.'
"He goes, 'That’s the best offer you’re gonna get, honey. You’re in Hollywood now,'" she claimed, stating that she turned it down as she wanted to be in love rather than an agreement.
Despite Anderson's claims, representatives for Stallone have refuted that the interaction happened, telling the publication: "The statement from Pamela Anderson attributed to my client is false and fabricated.
"Mr. Stallone confirms that he never made any portion of that statement."
Stallone has been married to Jennifer Flavin since 1997, and despite her filing for divorce last year, the pair reconciled a month later.
Anderson meanwhile was previously married to Motley Crue drummer Tommy Lee, with whom she shares sons Brandon, 26, and Dylan, 25.
She revealed that it was her children that had encouraged her to tell her own story in her upcoming book, telling People: "[There's] a little bit of anxiety before it comes out because this has been a year, basically, of therapy, going through my life from my first memory to my last memory.
"I'm really proud of it. It is something I wrote every word of. I didn't have a collaborator. I didn't have any ghost-writer, nothing.
"It's just one girl's story of how I made it through: a small-town girl going to Los Angeles and just going through all the wild and crazy adventures I did and then circling back and going home."
Anderson added that while reflecting on certain situations brought up a lot of "anger", she also found it "therapeutic" to work through the good and bad parts of her life.
Both her book and the Netflix documentary will be released on January 31.