Natasha Bure pushed back on criticism of her pregnancy style on June 12, telling followers she would keep showing her baby bump. Candace Cameron Bure’s daughter said the backlash came through direct messages, not a public debate, and that she is done dressing for other people’s comfort.
“Raise your hand if you will never understand people being offended by a pregnant belly being out?” she said in the TikTok clip. She followed that with a blunt line: “Let me just be the first to say: I do not care. I literally don’t care.”
June 12 TikTok
That response came after she said she had received countless DMs from grown women telling her to put her belly away or buy a bigger shirt. Bure said she had spent the first few months of pregnancy trying to conceal it and wearing uncomfortable outfits, then decided the bump had earned the right to be seen.
She also said she loves her pregnant belly and has never been so proud of her body. Her husband, Bradley Steven Perry, likes it too, which makes the dispute feel less like a family issue than an online policing problem that landed in her inbox.
Pregnancy and Pressure
Last month, Natasha Bure and Bradley Steven Perry said they were expecting their first baby together, using matching blue striped button-downs and jeans, mugs labeled “Dada” and “Mama,” and the caption “Our dream role.” That announcement set the frame for this latest response: a pregnancy that was already public, now met by strangers telling her how to display it.
She said she is only going to look like this for so long, and that her belly will be out until further notice. The practical read is simple: she is not retreating from the image she chose, and anyone bothered by it will have to keep scrolling.
Bradley Steven Perry
Bure is pregnant with her first baby with Bradley Steven Perry, and she said the early months were the harder ones because she was trying to conceal the pregnancy. Her latest post shifts the conversation from concealment to control, and it leaves no room for a compromise outfit or a softened message.
Her bluntest point is also the cleanest one: she does not care. For a public figure being told by grown women to cover up, that is the part that lands hardest.






