"The Cosby Show" star Geoffrey Owens isn't the only former sitcom star who is working a "day job" to help pay the bills.
On Sept. 4, former "Sabrina The Teenage Witch" star Nate Richert said he currently works as a janitor and handyman to make ends meet.
"I've been an actor for 32 yrs (since age 8). I'm extremely lucky to have had any success at all, let alone solid work in film and TV for 6yrs (20yrs ago). I'm currently a maintenance man, a janitor, a carpenter, and do whatever random jobs I can get to pay the bills," he wrote. "I do improv and songwrite to maintain my sanity."
From 1996 to 2003, Nate played Harvey Kinkle, who was Sabrina Spellman's love interest on the popular teen show. He's now speaking out about his own work employment after photos emerged of Geoffrey working at a Trader Joe's in New Jersey.
"Actors so very rarely have job security or consistent work, quality healthcare, a reasonable retirement. We are actors anyway because it is who we are at the core, for the love and need to bring the words on the page to life and to make you feel them (god, I love to make you laugh!,)" he wrote. "Not for fame, at least not in the traditional sense. Fame, to me, has only ever meant 'maybe more work someday.' A necessary evil because fame = the loss of anonymity, which can be uplifting when it brings someone joy, and hard when mean people decide to be mean."
He finished by writing, "GeoffreyOwens is an actor of a very high caliber; long before and long after playing "Elvin" on Cosby. I can't wait to see what's next. #GeofferyOwens #ActorsWithDayJobs #SabrinaTheTeenageWitch."
Many in Hollywood publicly supported Geoffrey. Terry Crews tweeted that he swept floors after his NFL career was over and "if need be, I'd do it again."
Blair Underwood praised Geoffrey, saying he is "being a man in doing what he needs to do to provide for himself and his family."
On Tuesday, Geoffrey appeared on "Good Morning America" wearing his Trader Joe's name badge. While speaking to Robin Roberts, he said he was "devastated" when the photos first emerged, but that feeling subsided soon after seeing the outpouring of support.
"There is no job that's better than another. It may pay better, it may have better benefits, it may look better on paper. But it's not better. Every job is worthwhile," he said. "No one should feel sorry for me either from a positive or negative perspective because I've had a great life and a great career. I'm doing fine."