Venus Nicolino

Venus Nicolino, known on television as Dr. V, is an American media personality,[1] author and doctor of clinical psychology. Her first book, Bad Advice: How to Survive and Thrive in an Age of Bullshit appeared on USA Todays National Bestseller List[2] and debuted at number one on the LA Times Bestseller List for Hardcover Nonfiction.[3] It was also recommended in a New York Post article as one of the "five books that will change your life".[4] Dr. V is the host of Marriage Boot Camp: Reality Stars on We TV. She began hosting the show in its sixth season and has also appeared in a reality television series on Bravo, L.A. Shrinks.[5]

Venus Nicolino
Dr. V in 2020
Born (1972-03-14) March 14, 1972
United States
Other namesDr. V
EducationNew York University, BA, MA
CSPP, MA, PhD
Medical career
ProfessionClinical psychology
InstitutionsMt. Sinai
USC

TV career

Dr. V began hosting Marriage Boot Camp: Reality Stars in its sixth season. She is also the host of the spin-off Marriage Boot Camp: Family Edition. The thirteenth season of the show aired on August 9, 2019.

Beginning with L.A. Shrinks in 2013, Dr. V appeared on other television shows, including Real Housewives of New Jersey, Millionaire Matchmaker and Marriage Boot Camp: Reality Stars and as a recurring guest on Watch What Happens Live, The Dr. Oz Show, The Doctors, MeTime with Frangela, Access Live, and Rachael Ray. She is also a revolving panelist on Steve.

Dr. V is a proponent of balanced diets, exercise, and healthy eating.[6] She believes 20% of children in America are mis-diagnosed as having mental illness. Nicolino is an outspoken critic of the over-prescription of drugs, especially to children.[7]

L.A. Shrinks producers described her as "sharp tongued with a mind to match", and said that she "serves up the sass" while being empathic with her clients.[8]

Critic Robert Lloyd in the Los Angeles Times wrote that the show felt "uncomfortably contrived", and that Nicolino appeared to be "auditioning here for a show of her own"; Lloyd criticized the show for over-emphasizing pop-culture topics such as sex.[9] However, A Bella LA interview observed that "Dr. V’s edgy and humorous yet philosophical take on "How to Human" has made her an audience favorite."[10]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.