Oh, Ranta!
Candace Cameron Bure and her husband Valerie Bure accidentally attended what turned out to be a very dark and satanic S&M sex thing.
The “Full House” alum, 49, revealed the “bizarre and embarrassing moment” on Tuesday’s episode of the “Candace Cameron Bure Podcast.”
“It shouldn’t be embarrassing for me, but they were more embarrassed for me to go to a place where I thought, ‘Oh, this person is a friend, so I’m going to chill and do this,'” she explained.
When I spoke with “Bachelor” alum Maddie Prewett, she explained: “We went into[the sex party]and my eyeballs were like popping out of my head because I saw something I’d never seen in my life.”
“I look at Val and I’m like, ‘How are you here? What’s going on?'” the Great American Family CCO continued. “We did a hard U-turn and got out of there right away. It was very slimy and weird.”
After this uncomfortable moment, the couple promised to take a “pause” before accepting future invitations from the friend.
“We had no idea what we were walking into, and it was so disgusting and awful,” Candice said.
Candice married Valeri in 1996 and they share children Natasha, 27, Lev, 26, and Max, 24.
The ‘Fuller House’ star’s confession came after she revealed that the thought of God watching her having sex makes her uncomfortable.
“You know, (…) I get weird when I see visuals like God watching me having sex, okay?” she said with a laugh during the March 3 episode.
The star hinted that it was because of her upbringing, explaining:
“Again, I’m almost 50 years old, and sometimes I can’t get my adolescent thoughts out of my head, or I can’t get my high school thoughts out of my head,” she continued.
“Now I look at it and giggle, because I don’t want to think that God is watching me have sex. But in that sense, I’m very comfortable.”
Aside from sex, Candiace candidly spoke on her podcast about the “really crappy things” she went through in her marriage to Valerie.
“I know that in times of depression like that, I wouldn’t say I’m depressed, but I’m kind of sitting in the shallows of a valley,” she explained. “It’s like, ‘This isn’t the best, but that’s life. Let’s try.'”
As Bure acknowledged, “There have been a lot of highs and some really low lows.”
