Willow Smith said she had no problem with her parents, Will Smith and Jada Pinkett Smith, oversharing about their personal lives.
Her famous parents have been making headlines for months about their surprising revelations, whether it be their secret romances, past experiences, or unknown facts about their marriage.
And while each headline manages to send shockwaves across social media, it rarely fazes Willow and her brother Jaden.

"I feel I've always understood that my parents are their own people," the 21-year-old told The Independent.
"A lot of kids think of their parents like… 'Your whole identity is for me.' [But] seeing them in this lifestyle we had, from a very young age it was clear to me they weren't just my parents. They're full, other people who have their own emotions."
Fresh Prince of Bel-Air Will has been particularly outspoken about his life and family, releasing a memoir in November that was filled with detailed and candid recollections.
In his book, the actor said he and Jada drank and had sex "multiple times every day" for four months straight at the start of their relationship.

Elsewhere, Will said that after his girlfriend cheated on him, he "had sex with so many women" that orgasms "would literally make me gag and sometimes even vomit."
Smith isn't the only one laying it all bare. His wife has recently used her Facebook chat show Red Table Talk to discuss her addictions to pornography, alcohol, ecstasy, and sex.
Jada - who hosts the show with her mother, Adrienne Banfield Norris, and daughter Willow - has made several shocking revelations that even managed to surprise her daughter.
Among those, was Jada admitting she had a threesome.

In a special episode in which Will appears with Jada, the celebrity couple discussed their respective marital infidelities.
Will admitted to feeling jealous about his wife's friendship with Tupac Shakur, and Jada confessed to having a sexual relationship with rapper August Alsina while she and Will were on a break.
Willow has since defended the talk show's bluntness, saying: "Everyone is going through something." She added that the "biggest disservice you could do" is "put up a facade and be like, that's not the case."
"That sounds wrong to me," she added.