For 18 years, the Durst quadruplets believed in the power of four. No longer.
On the eve of their 18th birthday, the identical quadruplets from Buffalo, Minn., retreated to their tiny basement bedroom, where they share two bunk beds, three dressers, four mirrors lined against a wall and one never-ending debate about what life would be like free of the others.
It's the same room where the quad squad crawled around in diapers, butting heads as infants -- four on the floor and already under the microscope.
But now, when these four freckled-faced dynamos let their long red hair down and sat in front of the four mirrors, each saw something entirely different.
Kendra, for one, had seen enough.
"I'm sick of my sisters," said Kendra, who once threw a hairbrush at Megan, calls sister Sarah "retarded" and didn't vote for Calli, the other quadruplet, for homecoming queen.
"The last thing I want to do is spend my 18th birthday with my sisters. It's like having three spies on your back," she said. "I can't wait to go off to college and start my own life."
Their Lifetime reality TV series, which debuts Tuesday night, is called "Four of a Kind," yet these identical quadruplets never have seemed more different. They've wondered their entire lives what it must be like to be individuals.