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#wendy williams documentary
elaytv · 4 months
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Does Kelvin Hunter think Someone is Stealing Wendy Williams Money and WHY he LOOK like Grimace 🤔😬🤧😂
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shanneltarot · 7 months
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Did Kevin Hunter marry his side chick Sharina Hudson? Tarot Reading reveals all
In Celebrity Gossip News, Did Kevin Hunter marry his side chick Sharina Hudson? Tarot Reading reveals all about Kevin including if he ever loved Wendy Williams? Is Kevin still trying to get Wendy's money to support his side chick?
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blackgirlslivingwell · 4 months
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Entertainment News Update
50 Cent Sells Diddy Documentary "Diddy Do It?" To Netflix
Model Crystal McKinney Is Suing Diddy
Chaka Khan's daughter Indira Milini Khan Said Diddy Disrespected Them
Tiffany Red Diddy 17th Floor Balcony Incident
Cam'ron's Ridiculous CNN Interview With Abby Phillip
Kelly Rowland's Fun With Cannes Security On Red Carpet
Simone Biles Defends Husband NFL Player Jonathan Owens Again
Wendy Williams Sells NYC Penthouse - Currently In A Care Facility
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amythystraine · 7 months
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amberraymond · 7 months
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Have you heard of Schmidt puzzles
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thescoopess · 7 months
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Wendy Williams Family is Speaking out Ahead of the Debut of Lifetime's 'Where is Wendy Williams'
Photo: Wendy Williams, Lifetime/Getty In this week’s PEOPLE cover story, the family of the former Wendy Williams Show host opens up about what transpired during this difficult time, as Williams’ life spiraled into turmoil. William’s niece, Alex Finnie, spoke out in an interview with Good Morning America about why her aunt is now choosing to share her story. She told Debroha Roberts that her…
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beemovieerotica · 7 months
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jonesywrites · 7 months
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Watching Part 2 of the Wendy Williams documentary.
I thought that I hated this Will guy, but it is nothing compared to her so-called publicist. Shawn. Or whatever her name is.
This bitch is a piece of work. An opportunist, user and liar. I never cared a lick for Wendy Williams but I wouldn’t wish what has happened to her on anyone.
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georgiapeach30513 · 7 months
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Anyone watching the Wendy Williams documentary on lifetime?
I want to!!! When I saw the trailer I got so teary eyed. I just don’t have lifetime/
I wanted to watch but I don't have Lifetime either.
It’ll pop up eventually. The trailer is gut wrenching. I wouldn’t say I was a Wendy Williams fan. But her story is amazing.
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juanitasupreme · 8 months
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You definitely do give off younger annoying sibling vibe but also in another news, did you see the Wendy Williams documentary news??? GOD LISTENED TO YOU
Fhffjffjj I've seen I cannot wait ! I miss her so bad ugh. Fuck her ex-husband!
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toxicthotsyndrome68 · 2 years
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Spoilers of Pamela’s doc (sorry for grammar error)
I honestly love how Pamela took control/narrative over her story from the ‘Pam and Tommy’ series. I think Pamela doing that made the ‘Pam and Tommy’ series more of a lifetime biopic then a serious biopic that the creators were going for. I wouldn’t surprised if it was Brandons idea to do the documentary (it would be iconic if it was). I love how candid and honest she was. Some parts of her diary/journals being read out loud gave a different feel, it truly made it feel more like a love letter to herself and as someone else said to her sons. I’m glad I never watched the ‘Pam and Tommy’ show but only saw screen grabs from tumblr. Pamela not shading the actors is something I wouldn’t be able to refrain from had it been me but her sons being upset about made me respect her sons. Their defensiveness over her and how she was treated, especially Brandon, is admirable.
Onto something not related to Pamela, I think it’s very fucking weird and annoying how Brittany (Tommy’s wife) can’t keep Pamela’s name from her mouth. I never particularly liked Brittany, especially during her vine era, but I never hated her either. The way she shades Pamela on TikTok with ‘Pamela if I died’ and it’s the soundbite of Wendy Williams “oh she passed” and some thing about so many people being with Tommy and how one in particular keeps messaging Tommy how they miss him. When she got mad that HelloTefi on TikTok did a Pamela and Tommy series. I do believe that she loves Tommy and maybe by extension Tommy loves her too but why does she keep coming for Pamela. If your as secure as you keep saying you are why are you threatened by a woman who doesn’t think about you. My respect for Tommy was gone when he talked about how his kids with Pamela are spoiled and it was because of Pamela. Then Brandon coming from a place of protectiveness and hurt from a child (something I know about because my dad was just as shitty towards my mom) talks bout how it’s not Pamela that’s the issue it’s him and it’s him who is an embarrassment to the family. Damn! This is also info I should’ve known about or should’ve been made public all because Tommy always had to be a victim and have someone woe-me him.
The insecurity was especially proven for me when Trisha Paytas did that Pamela and Tommy inspired photo shoot. The fat phobia and verbal abuse that came from Tommy and Brittany’s mouth made me so uncomfortable. Mostly because Pamela would never and hasn’t at all criticized Trisha and they ( Brittany and Tommy) feel so insecure and threatened by a slight mention of the past. I don’t like how Tommy berated Trisha and said how you don’t look like her (which Trisha did look like Pamela) and said she was too fat or something along those lines to be her. I think the extreme defensive over Pamela really upset/made her insecure. It’s fucking weird how they watched the video and criticized Trisha because Brittany posted it. Now Brittany trying so hard to make it about her saying how she’s fine even though the ironic part is that Brittany was never mentioned in the documentary at all. I know she was hurt and is hurt that Pamela doesn’t want to meet her nor want to be friends with her.
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shanneltarot · 7 months
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Will Wendy Williams recover from declining Health & Addiction | Tarot Reading
Trending Celebrity News, Will Wendy Williams recover from declining Health & Addiction. Tarot Reading will reveal what is needed to make a comeback to live a happy life. Why did they she do a documentary while recovering? https://youtu.be/ODA7R6mhHkU
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boricuacherry-blog · 2 years
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On the fifth anniversary of Michael Jackson's death, a quote from Nas appeared in a Rolling Stone piece by the writer Toure:
"When I got the news, the weather around me immediately changed drastically," the rapper said. "It suddenly rained so hard. Wind blew like crazy. Clouds did something different. It was as if you felt him leaving the world."
Nas spoke about Jackson as if he were a god. Quoting an array of African American luminaries on Jackson's legacy, Toure explained just how much he meant to black people, and how rapidly his "Wacko Jacko" label was fading away after his death.
Nowhere in Toure's article is there mention of the multiple accusations of child abuse that were levied against Jackson - accusations that have gained new life with the release of HBO's documentary Leaving Neverland, which chronicles, in excruciating and credible detail, Jackson's abuse of two boys, Wade Robson and James Safechuck, who have now come forward as adults.
Toure's omission is especially notable when you consider that he is a principal talking head in the other recent documentary about a serial abuser who was hiding in plain sight: Surviving R. Kelly, which chronicles, in excruciating and credible detail, the R&B star's alleged abuse of numerous women and underage girls.
That Toure, who unlike so many others wasn't fooled by R. Kelly, got caught up in Jackson hagiography suggests that there is something fundamentally different about his case - that he is too important to too many people to give up easily; that there is something about Jackson that makes us all a little confused.
As the evidence presented in Neverland reverberates through the media, the reaction has been oddly muted. In The New York Times, Wesley Morris wrote a moving account of seeing through Jackson's "magic trick" at last. Slate published a series of articles reckoning with his life and legacy, while Carl Wilson writing. "There are plenty of Jackson songs that will feel radioactive from now on."
Jackson has a few prominent defenders, like Wendy Williams, and legions of civilian fans who point out that a documentary is the not the same thing as a conviction. Still, the atmosphere has not been filled up with the kind of debate or commentary that accompanied the controversies surrounding R. Kelly, Harvey Weinstein, or Woody Allen. The predominant sense is of baffled silence, as if the magnitude of Jackson's crimes is so great that it hushes all else.
What, really, is there to say? The boys were so young, and they loved him so much.
But there is perhaps another reason the chattering class has been so uncharacteristically quiet: Michael Jackson presents a case too extraordinary for the media to easily absorb and process. Jackson was not just a pop star: he was the most famous famous person. To try to cancel him would be to point out a criminal at the very heart of the entertainment industry's belief system, and to remove the laurels of the most significant black artist of the pop age.
To analyze the phenomenon of Michael Jackson properly would mean taking on the laborious task of figuring out how we - meaning society at large - ended up with the kind of entertainment industry we have. And it would mean admitting that the American dream - a rapid ascent to stardom on the basis of sheer talent - is hollow.
The work of undoing Michael Jackson's place at the core of American culture has simply been too hard, for too long. We'd have to start with the man in the mirror, as somebody once said. That's not easy to do.
Much criticism has been leveled at the mothers of Wade Robson and James Safechuck, who allowed their boys to spend the night in Jackson's bed and stay with him for days on end without a chaperone - days that were filled with ceaseless molestation. It is easiest to blame them, because they are ideal scapegoats for a universal affliction, which is that fame is so important in America that it can blind us to what is happening literally before our own eyes, to our own kids. Painting these boys' mothers as monsters is the shortest cut to absolving ourselves.
Exacerbating our incompetence in this matter is a long tradition of racist and lazy reporting on Jackson, which undercuts the media's basic authority on the subject. The very idea of condemning him feels like joining a rather horrible tradition. Racist coverage of Jackson ended up enabling his crimes.
"Am I Black or White?" as the In Living Color parody went. It was Wacko Jacko who could plausibly claim to have an innocent relationship with all those boys. He was weird, he didn't know himself, and his new apparent whiteness undercut the sense that he was a red-blooded adult.
The lyrics to "Am I Black or White?" include the line "I'm still a virgin and I'm 33...and I hang out with Macauley all night." What Leaving Neverland reveals, to the viewer's awakening horror, is that those boys he took on tour and trotted out for the cameras were, quite obviously, his boyfriends. How could we not have seen that?
Black celebrities have never been taken seriously the way white celebrities have, and scandals are the best place to see that prejudice in action. The alleged crimes of Kelly and Jackson are different, but the comparison is helpful, because Kelly provides a similarly warped paradigm:
Jackson got away with it because nobody took him seriously, and Kelly, whose own former lawyer has called him "guilty as hell" of abusing underage girls, got away with it because nobody took the black girls he allegedly assaulted seriously.
We cannot trust Jackson or Kelly, or any of the music critics who defined their legacies for us. But who can you trust, besides the victims? Our imagination has been shaped by a racist mainstream press, the biased interests of a powerful music industry, and a moral obfuscation produced by that most intoxicating of drugs - fame. You may well have been lied to your whole life: about Michael Jackson and R. Kelly, yes, but also about the fact that no celebrity is quite what they seem. Famous people are personae, packaged and sold to you according to whatever standards of desirability are most profitable at that moment.
In this gargantuan mess of a situation, the fall of Michael Jackson contains the civilizational implications of a Greek tragedy. Harvey Weinstein, for example, was easier to interpret, neater in his moral typology: big bad rich man victimized weaker people, big bad rich man loses his wealth and status. In his case, we could at least convince ourselves that redemption was possible. But there is no narrative of righteous justice for Michael Jackson, not least because he's dead. It's too much to think about: too horrible, too unfixable.
We are nowhere near reaching closure on Jackson, but what he does teach us is that the American dream of fame and fortune is a sick institution, with a pathological relationship to the truth. It is a problem that touches on every sphere of culture, all the way down to the most basic values that we call American: meritocracy, money-spinning, male heroism, race-blind justice.
"Michael Jackson" was always a product, more than he was a man, and we were his customers. According to the principle 'caveat emptor,' it's up to us to figure out what we were really buying. And that is a mystery no one can solve but ourselves.
-Jo Livingstone
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Wendy Williams’ Guardian Reportedly Files New Complaint Against A&E Networks For Lifetime Documentary
Wendy Williams’ guardian has filed a new complaint against Lifetime’s parent company, accusing them of exploiting a “severely impaired person.” RELATED: Prayers Up! Wendy Williams Diagnosed With Two Additional Medical Conditions Key Details On Wendy’s Guardian’s Complaint Against Lifetime On (Sept. 16), Wendy Williams’ appointed guardian, Sabrina Morrissey, filed the suit in the New York Supreme…
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bodybybane · 2 days
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Wendy Williams’ Team Asks Court for All Proceeds From Lifetime Docuseries to Fund Medical Care https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/business/business-news/wendy-williams-lawsuit-proceeds-lifetime-docuseries-1236005143/
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thescoopess · 7 months
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Wendy Williams Appears in 'Unfiltered' Lifetime Documentary 'Where is Wendy Williams'
Photo: Wendy Williams/Getty Images, Lifetime A new Lifetime documentary about Wendy Williams’ turbulent recent history will offer an unvarnished, uncensored look at her health and financial problems. The first glimpse of the documentary “Where is Wendy Williams?” which will play over two nights later this month, was unveiled by Lifetime on Friday. It will debut on Feb. 24th and 25th at 8…
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