For Hernandez, to become “the hot girl” on national TV after surviving the dire circumstances of her birth is humbling.
“To be able to do this [“Joseline’s Cabaret”] is just a great feeling,” Hernandez told rolling out. “I’m actually amazed at me. Because I was born against the odds. I wasn’t supposed to be here. I was supposed to be dead.”
Rising up out of the slums of Puerto Rico – replete with a father who died from a drug overdose and being sexually molested in her youth – to become a successful TV star is what Hernandez is now trying to show other young women on “Joseline’s Cabaret” they can do the same. But that process of mentoring a group of emotionally-scarred women who came right off the streets made for some dramatic and volatile moments.
“Let me tell you, it’s hard because even some of the ladies there, they’ll be crying and I feel like they are snapping at me. I’m gonna let you watch the first episode and see what happened to see if I put my hands on one of them,” Hernandez said. “But trust me, it got really ugly a lot of times because I’m sitting up there giving you an opportunity and trying to help you out and being there for you and showing you the way that nobody showed me.
“And then you gonna snap at me, you little two-dollar rat,” she exclaimed. “I’m not with the madness.”
But there will be plenty of madness, combined with smoldering sensuality, risque perfomances, crying and laughing on season two of “Joseline’s Cabaret” on WeTV.