I have a sugar addiction - when I don't eat sugar, my body literally shakes. It's not something I'm proud of.

I use an acne cleanser because I do get breakouts, especially when I'm filming, and I use a toner to kind of help keep my oil under control with oil.

I never had had a large group of friends, so I often felt a little out of place and like I was in a different mindset from everyone else around me because I was so focused on my acting career.

I suffer from depression and anxiety, and having a show and having a character that portrays a young woman who is dealing with that and the consequences of it - how it affects her friendships and her relationships with her mom and her sister - it's beautiful to see that.

I'm always going to try to be as happy and grateful to fans, but I'm also just trying to live my life.

For teenage kids, they feel a pressure to sweep things under the rug because they feel like they're not important enough to have problems.

It's called a private life for a reason - it's mine, and it's special and sacred.

I don't drink coffee, so I have been known to have a Coca Cola on set at 6:30 A.M. in order to wake myself up.

I take, like, two baths a day. Is that weird? I don't know.

When you meet your best friend in real life, or you meet your soulmate, you just know it, and you feel it.

My mom would drive me from Cleveland to New York City and use my dad's hotel points for auditions. They were the most supportive parents that I could have. Without them, I wouldn't have gotten anywhere.

It takes a good 35-40 minutes to do my iconic ponytail every day.

A man in a position of power over me used that said power to try and take advantage of me.

With any teen show, there's going to be drama and heartache.

I think there's something about going on a hike and looking at a city view or looking at the ocean that brings you back to earth and kind of reminds you that your problems are quite small in retrospect.

School was a big source of anxiety for me. I hated school. I have social anxiety, and it developed when I was a kid. I had trouble going to birthday parties. It was always there. I begged my mom to let me be home-schooled at one point for a semester because I was so miserable at school.

It's always been something that I'm so able and willing to talk about that it's kind of foreign to me that people hide their depression and anxiety.

I didn't learn about depression or anxiety at school. So when I had to go to my parents to say 'I need help, I need to go to therapy,' I felt like this weird, messed up kid. And I wasn't, but I felt that way.

I have money in my bank account. I have my own apartment. I have friends. I still go through and experience depression. You don't have to be ashamed of it.

I wear sweatpants to set every day.

The response from the beginning has been really, really wonderful and positive. People have always really responded to me talking about mental health.

I order pizza a lot to set.

I am on medication - I've talked about that before - just to help my anxiety, so I'm not depressed all the time.

I had had to quit a few jobs in North Carolina because of how anxious they made me.

I just love spending the day at the beach and then staying inside all night.

I think I was 10 when I did my first community play, and then I started booking bigger roles in these plays, and people were telling me and my parents that I was talented. And I was like, 'Well, this is something I wanna do.'

It's never really been my intention; I've never gone out of my way to be relatable to anyone. I just say what I want, and I'm pretty blunt about things.

I'm not grateful for depression, but it honestly made me work harder and gave me the drive that I have to succeed and to make it work.

When my skin is breaking out pretty bad, I try to leave it alone as much as I can. I don't want to pack on product after product, I think that makes it worse and kind of overwhelms your skin.

Going to Comic-Con was mind-blowing, seeing all these fans and all these people who know my name.

I developed slight body dysmorphia - when I would break out, I couldn't look at myself in the mirror for a couple of months at a time. I remember doing my makeup before school in the dark, which is an awful idea, but it's because I didn't want to see myself in that bright light.

Our Betty Cooper is still the girl next door - she literally lives next to Archie. And she's the blonde all-American girl; she's so sweet and forgiving, gives people the benefit of the doubt and second chances, wears her heart on her sleeve. But she's also incredibly broken on the inside, for many different reasons.

I definitely have had fights with best friends. Some of them have led to me and said friend not being friends anymore, but it always turned out to be for the better. I think if you fight with someone, and you can just never reconcile, that just goes to show that maybe you shouldn't have been friends in the first place.

Some people say the things I do are annoying because I'm intentionally trying too hard to be relatable, but I'm really not.

The world that we've created - of 'Riverdale,' and of this town, and of these characters - are so vastly developed. And we're diving so deep into them that fans are just really gonna die for it.

I'm the kind of person, if I don't like you, unfortunately you know that.

I really would like to be on Broadway someday.

I can't say I've watched 'Twin Peaks.' I feel like I wouldn't be comfortable doing so until after I'm done with 'Riverdale.'

I never had a huge circle of friends, so I really just tried to cherish and not take for granted the close friends I did have, who were really supportive and understanding.

I actually didn't go to prom. I didn't have the chance.

No one's forcing me or any other celebrity to take time out of their day to say 'Hi' to these fans or do these things. It's just something we do nine times out of 10 because we love and appreciate our fans.

I just hope to keep doing film and TV and eventually Broadway. It's definitely what I want to do for the rest of my life.

I remember being in middle and high school and hearing Demi Lovato speak up about her mental illness, and that was comforting.

I have anxiety.

There came a point when I called my mom, and I was like, 'I need to come home. I'm not OK. I'm not good right now. My mental health isn't good.'

I've seen a therapist at different points in my life for different reasons.

Yes, we as actors are so appreciative of our fans, but there comes a point where, if we've been working all day, we don't owe 100 percent of ourselves to anyone, and that shouldn't be expected.

I really look up to Ashley Graham and how she promotes her body and flaunts it. She's beautiful and stunning, and I'm not going to say I love her body on Instagram and talk about it poorly in my personal life.

The first time I moved to L.A., I was there for five months, and my health got so bad because of how depressed I was.

What you want, what feels good to you - it's all going to change with every partner you have.