
Candace Cameron Bure of Full House and Fuller House fame has long been known as one of the only openly devout Christian stars in Hollywood. In a new interview, Cameron Bure is opening up to reveal the surprising reason she refuses to watch scary movies at home.
Candace Warns Of ‘The Portal’
During a recent episode of The Candace Cameron Bure Podcast, Candace sat down with her 25 year-old son Lev. He is one of the three adult children that she shares with the former professional hockey player Valeri Bure. They were joined by the Texas-based pastor Jonathan Pokluda.
The discussion between the trio quickly turned to television. While many moms say that TV rots your brain, Candace is more worried about your soul.
“In our house as a mom, I feel like you guys make fun of me when I talk about — they make fun of me all the time — but particularly when I’m serious about a spiritual thing happening. And then they’re rolling their eyes at me. Like the portal,” said Candace, 49.
Candace went on to say that Lev and the rest of her family “laugh at me because of the portal. I’m like, ‘You’re opening up a portal.'”
“Like if you’re watching this, or you’re playing this video game, or whatever, that’s a portal that could let stuff inside our home,” Candace explained. “I don’t even want someone watching a scary movie in our house on the TV. Because to me, that’s just a portal.”
Candace Doubles Down
The irony of this view is not lost on Candace, given her lifelong profession. Indeed, she has been acting ever since she scored a role in St. Elsewhere at the age of 6. Candace went on to play D.J. Tanner on 193 episodes of the classic family sitcom Full House from 1987 until 1995. She later reprised the character of D.J. on the Netflix spinoff Fuller House in 76 episodes that ran from 2016 until 2020.
Candace’s most recent credits include the television movies Ainsley McGregor Mysteries: A Case for the Yarn Maker and Home Sweet Christmas. Despite this, Candace is standing her ground when it comes to “the portal.”
“Listen, I’m in the film industry,” she stated. “I understand how it all works. I know that movie has a crew of 200 people, and they’re lighting it, and they’re adding the sound effects, and it’s makeup, and the camera people, and actors; however, there’s still something that can be incredibly demonic while they’ve made it.”
Watch Candace talk more about this in the video below.
‘Real Witchcraft’
Pastor Jonathan agreed with her, saying that he has heard of actresses practicing “real witchcraft” for horror roles.
“Even real witches actually sound the alarm, say, ‘Hey this is not okay, guys, you’re messing around with stuff, you don’t know what you’re messing around with,'” Jonathan warned.
“Yeah, and then you’re speaking it into all those homes if you’re watching it on TV—those are real witchcraft words, real spells,” Candace said in agreement.
Candace’s views on scary movies may seem over the top to some. Given her decades of experience in the film and television industry, however, it can also be argued that Candace knows what she’s talking about.
In the end, perhaps we should all think twice before messing with “the portal” by watching scary movies at home!
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