Farrah Abraham is lashing out at talk show host Bethenny Frankel after getting into an argument with an audience member on the show. The former "Teen Mom" star told Radar Online that she thought she was going on the show to talk about parenting and being a business woman.

"Before going on the show, I was told that it would be a positive and inspirational talk for mothers and business women," she said. "But as soon as I met Bethenny, it turned into a judgmental zone. She did not like how I valued my daughter's opinion and care so much about her that I allow her to have her own voice."

In a clip from the show, which airs Oct. 28, Frankel and her audience threw a lot of tough questions at Abraham who was forced to defend some of her parenting choices like the time she decided to wax her daughter Sophia's unibrow when she was three-years-old. Abraham defended her decision by saying Sophia was asleep at the time which only outraged the audience even more.

"Then, she brought up very old misconstrued tabloid topics like my daughter's unibrow and had judgmental women who were in the audience act disrespectful towards me and twist my opinion - as a mother, I care about my daughter's hygiene - to suggest Sophia would not be beautiful, even if she had a unibrow," Abraham said. "It was rude and I felt Bethenny siding with these women and their untrue statements."

At one point Frankel asks the 22-year-old if she is ok as the women in the audience continue to criticize her. Abraham told Radar that Frankel also brought up her sex toy line and was encouraging her audience members not to purchase the products.

Abraham took to Twitter to vent about the talk show appearance writing "Instead of judging start loving #Sunday."

"Overall, Bethenny seems to be in a dark place in her life and it was shocking to see how against women she really is," Abraham told Radar. "I hope she comes to better terms with herself so she can be a better mother, move on from her divorce - and be a better television host. I wish her all the best in her future and her career."