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Bill Gates To Make Surprise Appearance On Kyunki Saas Bhi Kabhi Bahu Thi; But Why?
Bollywood

Bill Gates To Make Surprise Appearance On Kyunki Saas Bhi Kabhi Bahu Thi; But Why?

by jummy84 October 22, 2025
written by jummy84

In an unexpected thrill for television viewers, tech magnate and philanthropist Bill Gates is set to make a special cameo on Kyunki Saas Bhi Kabhi Bahu Thi 2 — the latest season of the iconic Indian soap led by Smriti Irani. Reports suggest the appearance will span three episodes and focus on maternal and newborn health, marking a rare crossover between global philanthropy and Indian daily-drama.

Why Gates? Why the soap?

The track—reportedly designed to be uplifting yet socially meaningful—features Tulsi Virani (Smriti) engaging in a video call with Bill Gates. Rather than a typical celebrity cameo, the storyline centres around health awareness and the work of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. A production insider explained: “Since the foundation actively works on pregnant women and newborn health in India, the collaboration felt organic. Smriti wanted the show to be more than family drama—she wanted it to spark change.”

The format: Tech-giant meets Virani Mansion

According to reports, the episode will begin when Tulsi receives an invite to a household event (setting the family drama tone) and then shifts to a serious note when Bill Gates appears virtually. The arc is said to unfold across three episodes, combining the usual saas-bahu angst with a surprise global-change agenda.

A dramatic departure from tradition

For decades, Kyunki Saas Bhi Kabhi Bahu Thi defined family-drama in India—entrenched in saas-versus-bahu conflict, emotional monologues and over-the-top theatrics. By bringing in Bill Gates, the reboot signals something entirely different: high-profile global issues entering primetime serials. Many critics are calling it a bold move—“this may be the most dramatic crossover event since Avengers,” one media outlet quipped.

Smriti Irani’s social-issue pivot

Since her return to the role of Tulsi, Smriti Irani has steered the show toward progressive themes—body positivity, generation-gap narratives, women’s empowerment and now, public health. Her decision to embrace a storyline with Bill Gates underscores a growing trend: serials as platforms for awareness, not just entertainment.

What it means for Indian television

This crossover isn’t just a gimmick. It signals that Indian TV dramas are evolving—connecting to global discourse, merging cinematic stars, tech billionaires and soap operas. And it raises the bar for PR-stunts: a cameo by Bill Gates isn’t just about ratings anymore, it’s about relevance. For fans of long-running family dramas, it also marks a shift from pure nostalgia toward meaningful narrative arcs.

Also Read: Mira Rajput Kapoor Slams Diwali Crackers Amid Toxic Air Crisis: ‘Stop Normalising This’

The buzz is real

The announcement has already ignited social media. Hashtags around Bill Gates, Tulsi Virani and the show’s surprise cameo are trending. Fan clubs are speculating how the plot will balance the traditional soap-elements with digital activism. “Tulsi no longer only battles her daughter-in-law; now she debates public health,” one fan noted.

Sneak peek: What to expect

Virtual call setup: Gates may appear on screen through a tech-enabled sequence where Tulsi engages him on maternal health.

Serial families + real-world issues: Expect Virani household drama to transition into a detailed discussion on newborn wellness.

Three-episode arc: This will be short-term, high-impact—meant to boost visibility while staying on-brand for the daily drama.

Broader social message: More than star cameo, the storyline aims to empower audiences with awareness about women and child health.

With Bill Gates stepping into Tulsi’s fictional world, Indian television may be witnessing a crossover that blends entertainment with global impact. Whether this appears as a marketing coup or meaningful storytelling, one thing is certain—Kyunki Saas Bhi Kabhi Bahu Thi 2 has pulled off a crossover no one saw coming.

October 22, 2025 0 comments
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Bill Gates Joins The Family: Smriti Irani Confirms His Appearance On Kyunki Saas Bhi Kabhi Bahu Thi 2! | Glamsham.com
Lifestyle

Bill Gates Joins The Family: Smriti Irani Confirms His Appearance On Kyunki Saas Bhi Kabhi Bahu Thi 2! | Glamsham.com

by jummy84 October 22, 2025
written by jummy84

In a surprising crossover between global philanthropy and Indian television, Microsoft co-founder and philanthropist Bill Gates is set to make a special appearance on the popular TV serial Kyunki Saas Bhi Kabhi Bahu Thi 2. Actress-turned-politician Smriti Irani confirmed the news in an exclusive conversation with CNBC-TV18, calling it a “historic moment” for Indian entertainment.

“This marks a historic moment in Indian entertainment,” Irani said. “For far too long, women and children’s health has remained on the margins of mainstream dialogue. This initiative is a powerful step toward changing that.”

Sources close to the show revealed to News18 Showsha that Gates will appear via video call in an upcoming episode, where his character will speak to Tulsi, played by Irani. In the plotline, Tulsi is struggling with her strained relationship with her daughter Paridhi (Pari) Virani, and Gates will offer her thoughtful advice on how to balance family responsibilities with self-care.

“Yes, the rumours are true,” an insider confirmed. “Tulsi will open up about her conflict with Pari, and Bill Gates will guide her with heartfelt advice. It’s an emotional yet empowering scene.”

Also Read: Smriti Irani and Ekta Kapoor Seek Blessings! Visit Nathdwara Temple Ahead of ‘Kyunki Saas Bhi Kabhi Bahu Thi’ Premiere

Earlier today, the makers released a promo teasing the episode. In the clip, Tulsi is seen talking on a video call with someone from America. While the person’s identity is not explicitly revealed, viewers can hear her say, “Jai Shree Krishna, bahut accha laga yeh jaanke ke aap seedha America se mere parivaar se judd rahe hai. Aapka hum sab besabri se intezaar kar rahe hai.”

Kyunki Saas Bhi Kabhi Bahu Thi 2, which premiered in July 2025, marks the return of several original cast members including Amar Upadhyay, Hiten Tejwani, Gauri Pradhan, and Ketki Dave, along with new faces like Shagun Sharma and Rohit Suchanti. Unlike its predecessor, this season is expected to be a limited series.

October 22, 2025 0 comments
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Bill Gates to appear in Smriti Irani's Kyunki Saas Bhi Kabhi Bahu Thi 2; actor calls it ‘historic moment’
Bollywood

Bill Gates to appear in Smriti Irani’s Kyunki Saas Bhi Kabhi Bahu Thi 2; actor calls it ‘historic moment’

by jummy84 October 22, 2025
written by jummy84

Updated on: Oct 22, 2025 05:22 pm IST

The makers released a teaser promo from the upcoming episode, while several reports added the guest will be none other than Bill Gates.

Actor-politician Smriti Irani made her comeback to the small screen with the reboot of her iconic show Kyunki Saas Bhi Kabhi Bahu Thi earlier this year. The show has gained popularity among viewers in the last few months. The makers have now teased the appearance of a special guest in an upcoming episode of the show with a promo. The special guest will be none other than Microsoft co-founder and philanthropist Bill Gates!

Microsoft co-founder and philanthropist Bill Gates is all set to appear briefly on the popular Television show.

Bill Gates in Kyunki Saas Bhi Kabhi Bahu Thi?

In the teaser shared by Balaji Telefilms Limited on their Instagram account, Smriti aka Tulsi opened her laptop to get on a video call and said, “Jai Shree Krishna, bahut accha laga yeh jaanke ke aap seedha America se mere parivaar se judd rahe hai. Aapka hum sab besabri se intezaar kar rahe hai (We are grateful that you are connecting with us and our family directly from America. We are waiting for you).”

The guest’s face was not revealed in the teaser. Smriti then teased that the special guest will be revealed very soon. The caption added that the special guest will appear in the episodes on Thursday and Friday.

More details

Meanwhile, Smriti, who is a former Minister for Women and Child Development, confirmed the same in an interview with CNBC-TV18. “This is a historic moment in Indian entertainment,” she said.

Produced by Ekta Kapoor, the series brings back the beloved lead pair — Smriti Irani as Tulsi Virani and Amar Upadhyay as Mihir — along with a new generation of characters played by Rohit Suchanti, Tanisha Mehta, Shagun Sharma, and Aman Gandhi.

Unlike the original, which ran for 1833 episodes over eight years, the reboot has been designed as a limited series of 150 episodes. The show premiered on 29 July 2025 on Star Plus and is also available digitally on JioHotstar.

News / Entertainment / TV / Bill Gates to appear in Smriti Irani’s Kyunki Saas Bhi Kabhi Bahu Thi 2; actor calls it ‘historic moment’

October 22, 2025 0 comments
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High Potential Adds Bill Nye the Science Guy as Guest Star
TV & Streaming

High Potential Adds Bill Nye the Science Guy as Guest Star

by jummy84 October 13, 2025
written by jummy84

Bill Nye the Science Guy is adding TV guest star to his already impressive resume. The science icon and advocate will appear as himself on Tuesday’s episode of “High Potential” on ABC.

Nye will offer his science knowledge to help out “High Potential” star Kaitlin Olson’s character Morgan Gillory in a “Morgan Vision,” guiding her one step closer to solving the episode’s case.

In Season 1, Gillory was a janitor at the LAPD but become a full-time consultant after solving a murder case and impressing everyone with her IQ of 160. The show premiered in the fall of 2024 and was renewed for a second season in January ahead of the season finale. It was a hit at ABC and averaged 16 million viewers per episode, with the series premiere racking up more than 30 million views by the time it was renewed.

Nye is best known for hosting the popular educational program “Bill Nye the Science Guy” in the ’90s. Since then, he’s also had a Netflix series titled “Bill Nye Saves the World” and a Peacock show “The End Is Nye.” He’s appeared on other shows like “The Big Bang Theory,” “The Masked Singer,” “Dancing With the Stars,” “Blindspot” and more.

Along with Olson, “High Potential” also stars Daniel Sunjata, Javicia Leslie, Deniz Akdeniz as, Amirah J, Matthew Lamb and Judy Reyes. The show is based on the French series “Haut Potentiel Intellectuel (HPI).” Drew Goddard developed the series for American television and serves as executive producer via Goddard Textiles along with Sarah Esberg. Todd Harthan serves as showrunner and executive producer. Olson is a producer on the series in addition to starring. 20th Television produces, with Harthan currently under an overall deal at the studio.

October 13, 2025 0 comments
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Tommy Lee, Bill Cosby Assault Accusers Await New Law to Revive Lawsuits
Music

Tommy Lee, Bill Cosby Assault Accusers Await New Law to Revive Lawsuits

by jummy84 October 12, 2025
written by jummy84


I
n 2003, Heather Evans Taylor agreed to take a helicopter sightseeing tour with a pilot friend she’d met through her bank teller job in San Diego. When she arrived at Montgomery Field Airport, she was surprised to see that Tommy Lee, the lanky and colorfully tattooed Mötley Crüe drummer, was already waiting to join them, she says.

What allegedly happened next was described in excruciating detail in a sexual assault lawsuit Taylor filed against Lee in December 2023. She claimed Lee and the pilot, David Martz, started drinking and snorting cocaine immediately after takeoff. She alleged Lee forcibly kissed, groped, digitally penetrated her, and tried to force her to give him oral sex – all while Martz looked on, smiling. (Through his lawyer, Sasha Frid, Lee has previously “vehemently and categorically” denied the allegations. Frid declined to comment for this article.)

“It was a horrific experience. I felt like they made a mockery out of me,” Taylor tells Rolling Stone, revealing her full identity in her first media interview after originally filing her complaint as a Jane Doe. Sitting at her dining room table, her eyes welling with tears, Taylor says she flew back in stunned silence with Martz after they allegedly dropped Lee off at the Van Nuys Airport in Los Angeles. “I never would have thought something like that would happen to me,” she says. “I felt so abandoned and alone.”

Taylor, 52, says the alleged incident left her with post-traumatic stress disorder, panic attacks, and anxiety. She was too afraid to report the alleged incident to police, she says, so she barely talked about it for years and tried to move on. Eventually, she went on medication, started rescuing dogs, and began intensive psychotherapy. She thought her chance to seek legal redress had long since lapsed, until the California legislature passed the Sexual Abuse and Cover-Up Accountability Act in late 2022. The act opened two retroactive filing windows for otherwise expired claims of adult sexual abuse. Claims for incidents prior to 2009, like Taylor’s, had to meet two specific criteria: First, plaintiffs had to establish that a private business was legally responsible for damages arising from the assault. Second, they had to allege that the business covered up a previous claim of sexual assault.

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The new law, known as AB 2777, was part of a wave of legislation across the country recognizing that many survivors of sexual assault take years or even decades to step forward due to lasting trauma, social stigma, or fear of retribution. Unlike New York’s Adult Survivors Act, which functioned as a catch-all that allowed plaintiffs to sue virtually any individual or institution, the California statute was more tailored. Beyond requiring a cover-up for decades-old claims, it also barred cases against public institutions such as schools and law enforcement agencies. The vague wording also made it difficult to go after the alleged perpetrators themselves as individual defendants.

But back in 2023, the law seemed to offer Taylor a real chance to sue Lee and maybe even Martz, though Martz had died in a single-engine Cessna crash in 2015. (According to the Los Angeles Times, which reported on Martz’s death, the pilot had a lengthy disciplinary record that included multiple license suspensions. One revocation in 2009 came after Martz was filmed receiving oral sex from a Swedish porn star while hovering over San Diego. Martz also faced misdemeanor charges for landing a helicopter on a public road in the Hollywood Hills in 2006 to collect Lee for a Nine Inch Nails concert. He received three years of probation.)

Taylor says she initially considered the law “promising,” so she got her records in order, linked with a law firm, and filed her lawsuit in December 2023. She was still in a “vulnerable” place, she says, but she felt incredible relief when she signed the papers, got a stamped copy, and talked about it with her husband.

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“I was terrified yet excited at the moment I filed,” Taylor says. She recalls thinking to herself, “I get to reclaim who I am as a person. I get to take control. I’m in control, nobody else is now.”

Less than four months later, though, a California judge stopped her in her tracks, dismissing her entire complaint on a technicality. The judge said she failed to give enough detail in her complaint to support the allegation of a cover-up. Taylor says she broke down and cried.

“It was very, very frustrating,” she says. “It felt like the judge and the law were punishing the wrong person. I’m not the one who committed the crime. But it felt like I was the one being held accountable.”

Taylor’s shock turned to outrage when Lee’s lawyer publicly praised the judge’s decision, saying it proved Taylor had no case. The attorney called her allegations “false and bogus.” For Taylor, the provisional dismissal proved something else – that AB 2777 had led many hopeful plaintiffs to a “brick wall.” It allowed the judge to reject her lawsuit before even considering the merits of her abuse claim.

A judge gave Taylor 20 days to try again with an amended lawsuit. But 11 days later, in a surprise move, Taylor and her lawyers made the strategic decision to voluntarily withdraw her entire lawsuit. In a statement to Rolling Stone at the time, they said a second round of proposed legislation, if successful, would likely give Taylor a better shot at success. In the meantime, they didn’t want to risk another adverse ruling from the judge that could permanently terminate Taylor’s right to sue Lee.

Through his lawyer, Lee again claimed victory. “This dismissal is a complete vindication for Tommy Lee,” Frid said in a statement to Rolling Stone in May 2024. Taylor says it was painful to go online in the immediate aftermath. Some online were calling her a “fraud,” she says. As a Jane Doe plaintiff at the time, she felt powerless to speak up. She desperately wanted to show people the handwritten letter she says she received from Martz, inviting her to lunch just weeks before the alleged assault, but she felt cast aside.

Heather Evans Taylor in her San Diego home this month.

Nancy Dillon

“Everybody came for me,” she says. “I felt silenced. I wanted people to know I’m real. I’m not this ghost.”

Through it all, Taylor says she never considered giving up. “I dismissed the case so I could resume it later,” she explains. “I’m still planning on going full force into this so I can get some type of justice.” 

Taylor says she’s hopeful she’ll get that chance with a version of the legislation that her lawyers cited last year. The bill, AB 250, is now sitting on Gov. Gavin Newsom’s desk, awaiting a decision by Monday. If made into law, AB 250 would give Taylor and other plaintiffs like her, including Bill Cosby accuser Victoria Valentino, a fully retroactive filing window for any claim of adult sexual abuse against an individual perpetrator, no matter how old, for a new two-year period ending Dec. 31, 2027. In what legal experts are calling a potentially seismic shift for plaintiffs like Taylor, the law would allow suits against alleged individual perpetrators without the need to prove a cover-up. (Claims against businesses would still require evidence of a cover-up.)

An Uphill Battle

Taylor says she filed her initial lawsuit with the belief that AB 2777 allowed her to sue Lee as an individual and then use the discovery process to find enough facts to meet the law’s other requirements. She, and other plaintiffs like her, faced an uphill battle. In court filings, their lawyers said AB 2777 included language that plaintiffs could revive “any claim,” including against an individual, so long as the overall lawsuit also alleged a business defendant engaged in a previous cover-up. But lawyers representing the accused countered that the law, as written, only mentioned liability on the part of businesses and never explicitly stated that perpetrators could be sued. 

The law’s ambiguity became an immediate battleground as defendants like Lee sought early dismissals on procedural grounds. Before long, judges started interpreting AB 2777 to completely exclude individual defendants. In one sexual assault lawsuit filed against Nigel Lythgoe, a judge rejected all the claims against the American Idol producer as an individual, saying they could never be filed again. The judge otherwise allowed the case to proceed against the TV production company Lythgoe was leading at the time, though the plaintiffs later filed a dismissal. (At a nearby courthouse, however, a different judge made a completely opposite ruling in a similar case, allowing a music industry CEO accused of sexual assault to remain on the hook as an individual defendant, despite his denials.)

While AB 2777 was clearly intended to rein in powerful institutions and employers with cultures of silence that condoned abuse, it seemed to toss out hurdles for plaintiffs suing less conventional defendants. The bar appeared particularly high for lawsuits involving the entertainment industry, where alleged perpetrators might work for an obscure, closely guarded company in which they’re the sole employee.

“Before speaking up, I felt like I was lying to myself … The silence was eating me alive.”

Heather Evans Taylor

In the case of Lee, Taylor argued that she needed more time to conduct discovery to identify a company she suspected Lee had at the time of her alleged assault. She had also sued his touring company, Mayhem, but Lee claimed the corporation was suspended in February 2023. Taylor argued it was merely delinquent.

AB 2777 also raised questions about what exactly qualified as a cover-up. Its text described a cover-up as a “concerted effort to hide evidence” and incentivize silence, and it pointed to the use of nondisclosure agreements or confidentiality agreements as examples. But legal experts say the wording was murky, making judicial interpretation a moving target. The judge who provisionally dismissed Taylor’s claim said during one court hearing that Lee’s lifestyle leading up to the alleged assault, described as “salacious and hedonistic” in Taylor’s original complaint, had the court questioning Taylor’s ability to allege a prior cover-up at all. The judge also found fault with Taylor’s claims that Lee “must” have had a loan-out company in 2003 because it was “industry standard.” 

Taylor and her lawyers could have forged ahead, trying to address the court’s concerns, but it would have been a gamble. And it could have ended with a ruling barring her from ever bringing her claims again.

Victoria Valentino at Bill Cosby’s sexual assault trail in Norristown, Pennsylvania in 2017.

Bastiaan Slabbers/NurPhoto/Getty Images

Valentino, the former Playboy model who claims Cosby drugged and raped her in 1969, ended up in a similar situation. She filed a lawsuit against Cosby using AB 2777 in June 2023, alleging the disgraced comedian convinced her to swallow two pills during a meeting at a restaurant while she was grieving the drowning death of her six-year-old son. Valentino, 82, alleged Cosby drove her to a nearby office and raped her while she was too immobilized to fight back. (Cosby has denied the allegations through his spokesman.)

A judge provisionally dismissed Valentino’s lawsuit in 2024, ruling she hadn’t pleaded “any facts” establishing liability on the part of the three Cosby-linked companies she was also suing. The judge ruled she also failed to show any “concerted effort” to stage a cover-up. Though Valentino claimed Cosby sexually assaulted six different women “before or around the same time,” possibly drugging them in what she claimed amounted to a “cover-up,” the judge pushed back. “The statute requires a cover-up by the entity,” the judge wrote. (​​In 2018, Cosby was convicted of three counts of aggravated assault on Andrea Constand, a woman he had mentored at Temple University. The comedian, 88, was released from prison in 2021 after serving only part of his three-to-10-year sentence after the Pennsylvania Supreme Court overturned his jury conviction, finding that a “non-prosecution agreement” with a former district attorney should have protected Cosby from criminal liability. He has denied allegations of sexual assault from dozens of accusers.)

“Waiting for Justice”

With AB 250, California Assembly Majority Leader Cecilia Aguiar-Curry set out to fix what her office described as the “problem” with AB 2777. In a fact sheet published online, the office said AB 2777 “applied only to claims against entities that covered up a sexual assault, not the individuals who perpetrated sexual assault.” The office said AB 250 also was needed to extend the statute of limitations until December 31, 2027, thereby reviving important related claims such as wrongful termination and sexual harassment. The bill also ditches the burdensome cover-up requirement for claims against individuals.

“We provide more clarity that allegations of sexual assault against a perpetrator do not require proof of a cover-up by an entity,” John Ferrera, the chief of staff to Aguiar-Curry, tells Rolling Stone. “The survivor can sue the perpetrator alone, without having to prove there was a cover-up.”

Aguiar-Curry says the legislation is critical to protect survivors who fell through the cracks of AB 2777. “These survivors are frozen right now, and they’re just waiting for justice. The governor’s action [signing the bill] will help make justice possible for all of them,” she tells Rolling Stone. “It would send a clear message that California will stand up for our survivors.” Without the bill, she says, “many survivors would lose their last chance to seek accountability and closure.”

Taylor and Valentino both say they plan to re-file their lawsuits in the new year if the bill becomes law. For his part, Newsom hasn’t signaled how he’ll proceed. He can sign AB 250, veto it, or do nothing, which would allow it to become law on Jan. 1 without his stated approval. “The Governor has until October 13 to act on legislation currently on his desk,” a Newsom spokesperson says. “Our office does not typically comment on pending legislation.”

“He Suggests I Call the Police”

As she awaits the fate of AB 250, Taylor says she’s eager to tell her story, regardless of whether she’ll be able to file again. She opens a manila folder and fishes out the handwritten letter that she says Martz sent to her before the alleged assault. The postmark reads Dec. 20, 2002. “I would love to go to lunch. Give me a call or email me,” Martz allegedly wrote.

Taylor says she first met Martz in February 2002. He opened a business banking account with her, and they struck up a friendship. He repeatedly invited her to join him for a sightseeing ride in his helicopter, she says, and while she was hesitant at first, she eventually agreed.

In her lawsuit, Taylor said that when she arrived at the airfield that day, Martz informed her there was a last-minute change of plans. They walked toward the hangar, and Lee was already waiting by the chopper, she claimed.

“Within a matter of minutes of being airborne, Martz pulled out alcohol he had stored in the helicopter and began to mix drinks,” the lawsuit alleged. Taylor said Martz and Lee drank, smoked marijuana, and snorted cocaine during the flight. Martz purportedly asked Taylor through the headphone system why she wasn’t drinking and said she should “just relax.”

Taylor claimed Martz urged her to join them in the cockpit to get the best view. Feeling “immense pressure” to meet Martz’s demands while captive in the tiny aircraft, she acquiesced, the filing said. Almost immediately, Lee began groping and kissing her, she claimed. When she attempted to pull away, he allegedly “became more forceful.”

“At one point, Lee penetrated plaintiff with his fingers while fondling her breasts. Lee then pulled down his pants and attempted to force plaintiff’s head toward his genitals. By this point, plaintiff was in tears, but she had nowhere to go — she was trapped with little mobility to leave the cockpit,” the lawsuit said.

“Our trauma needs to be honored and valued for what it was.”

Victoria Valentino

As she recounts that day to Rolling Stone, Taylor says she feels foolish for ever believing Martz was her friend. “He wasn’t who I thought he was,” she says. “I trusted him, and he took advantage of the situation.” 

She then pulls out a tiny diary with a rainbow-colored unicorn on its tattered cover. She flips through several loose pages filled with cursive writing. She penned them in the days after the alleged assault, she says.

“So embarrassed. Feel awful, feel violated. Never did I expect to be used and taken advantage of,” she wrote on a page dated Feb. 23, 2003. “Tommy Lee hurt me. I never told anyone. I should have went to the police,” she scrawled on another page dated March 7, 2003. “Asking myself how Tommy Lee could sexually assault me and I didn’t tell. I’m scared,” she purportedly wrote on March 18, 2003.

The diary is so old, she says, the binding fell apart. She’s not sure it would be admissible at a possible trial, but she’s adamant it’s a true record of her life at the time, filled with daily observations, many having nothing to do with Lee. One page dated April 8, 2003, reads, “Told my friend Ed what happened to me. He suggests I call the police.”

The friend, Ed Banda, confirms to Rolling Stone that he remembers Taylor telling him in 2003 that she’d been assaulted by a celebrity. “We had a friendship, but she was very hesitant,” he says. “She didn’t know what to do. She was figuring stuff out. She was just worried about being ostracized.” 

Banda, 62, says they later reconnected when they worked together at a grocery store in 2014. She told him she was still considering the possibility of “pursuing it,” he says. He told her she should, he recalls. “It does affect you,” he says, recalling that her voice would quiver. Ultimately, she wasn’t ready, he says. “She wanted to keep tight-lipped about it.”

Taylor says her trauma from the alleged assault turned her into a virtual recluse. She started taking anti-anxiety medication, which helped. Then she started rescuing animals around 2010, and found it therapeutic. When one of her therapists moved out of state, she started seeing Dr. Neenah Amaral in September 2022. “I can corroborate that [the alleged incident with Lee] was part of the reason she came in. It was for the PTSD and the anxiety based around that story,” Amaral tells Rolling Stone. “That was the primary topic. In my professional opinion, I believe her.”

“I Probably Blamed Myself”

Like Taylor, Valentino is hopeful AB 250 will become law. Last January, she lost her home and a lifetime’s worth of memorabilia in the wildfire that swept through her neighborhood in Altadena. She says having a chance to sue Cosby again would give her a “purpose” amid so much loss.

Speaking by phone earlier this month, Valentino recalls the night Cosby allegedly assaulted her. She was still reeling from the drowning death of her son in 1969, she says, and the purported assault plunged her into an even deeper depression. She had no idea Cosby had other accusers at the time, and going to the police never crossed her mind.

“I probably blamed myself. I didn’t feel good enough, powerful enough, and this was the sixties. I had been out marching against Vietnam and for civil rights. Back in the day, we smoked pot, it was a felony,” she recalls. “It never occurred to me that the police were  safe to go [to]. It never occurred to me that I would ever find justice with them, or protection. So I just sucked it up.”

But after Constand first sued Cosby in 2005 and comedian Hannibal Buress reignited interest in the Cosby allegations with a viral joke in 2014, she stepped forward with her allegations and became an outspoken critic of Cosby. She attended the Santa Monica civil trial where a jury found Cosby liable for the sexual assault of a 16-year-old girl, Judy Huth, at the Playboy Mansion in 1975. Speaking with Rolling Stone after that verdict in June 2022, Valentino said the statute of limitations for her alleged assault was “so far gone,” there was “no hope” she could ever bring a lawsuit, but she was “thrilled to death” for Huth’s victory. Three months later, on Sept. 19, 2022, Gov. Newsom approved AB 2777, setting the stage for her own lawsuit.

She says “an opportunity to seek tangible justice” would be deeply meaningful. “I’m not looking forward to being lacerated by his attorney,” she says, “but I want him to face the consequences of his actions. Women are not expendable.” She argues there’s no statute of limitations on murder, “yet this is a murder of a woman’s spirit, a murder of a woman’s career.”

Valentino says Newsom signing AB 250 would send a clear message of support. “We need some kind of recourse. Our trauma needs to be honored and valued for what it was. Our lives need to be respected,” she says. “My assault changed the entire trajectory of my life.” (Cosby’s spokesman, Andrew Wyatt, declined to comment for this piece.)

“I Let It Consume Me”

Legal experts interviewed by Rolling Stone agree that AB 250, if made law, would address many of the roadblocks plaintiffs faced with AB 2777. The new legislation still keeps public entities off-limits, but it closes the loophole surrounding perpetrator defendants.

“It’s huge,” says Karen Barth Menzies, a partner at the Justice Law Collaborative law firm who’s helped plaintiffs use California revival statutes to sue celebrity defendants including Backstreet Boys singer Nick Carter and Mexican superstar Gloria Trevi. She said AB 2777 “confused” a lot of plaintiffs and lawyers alike, leaving many unwilling to take on the high cost and risk of litigation, especially against wealthy opponents. 

“When they passed AB 2777, it was retroactive without limitation and we expected the floodgates to open, in a way, because, unfortunately, sexual abuse is so prevalent, especially in the music and entertainment industries,” she says. “While the legislative history and intent seem clear, the language of AB 2777 wasn’t, which has caused confusion and contentious fights in court.” AB 250 “is much clearer,” she says. She expects the longer, two-year window will also help victims seek justice, especially coming after AB 2777, which itself increased awareness of revival laws.

Jessica Ramey Stender, deputy legal director at Equal Rights Advocates, says beyond the bill’s clear stance on perpetrator defendants, she’s also impressed with its more liberal, two-year filing window, saying it would offer potential plaintiffs a much broader chance to go after private businesses purportedly engaging in cover-ups.

“Sexual assault is one of the most traumatic experiences a person can endure, so sexual assault survivors often take a lot of time to even be able to come forward and speak out about what happened to them, let alone take action to hold the perpetrator or any other entity accountable,” she says. The new window proposed by AB 250 could be life-changing for survivors, she says, even as it helps “expose patterns of abuse to help prevent future harm by creating accountability within institutions,” she says.

Taylor says she decided to reveal her identity as AB 250 sits on Newsom’s desk in the hope it might encourage others to step forward as well. She says her silence over the last two decades left her feeling physically and mentally drained. “I feel like I missed out on 20 years of my life because I let it consume me,” she says.

“This is not a money grab stunt. I’m speaking out on my behalf because nobody else will. This is not to gain attention. I don’t want that,” she says. “There’s a person here. And I want everybody to know that it’s okay to come out and speak. It’s okay to talk about it.”

As she sits in her tidy San Diego-area home next to a framed cover of San Diego magazine that named her pet-sitting business a top local pick, Taylor admits she still prefers animals to most humans. But she feels herself getting stronger. She expects to be attacked again online now that she’s going public. She is ready, she says. “Dedicating my life to animals really helped me heal,” she says.

“Before speaking up, I felt like I was lying to myself. Not facing it led to more panic attacks and more anxiety,” she says. “The silence was eating me alive.”

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October 12, 2025 0 comments
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‘Knees Are a Private Business’: Bill Nighy on Good Trousers, Terrible Advice, and His Love of Knitwear
Fashion

‘Knees Are a Private Business’: Bill Nighy on Good Trousers, Terrible Advice, and His Love of Knitwear

by jummy84 October 11, 2025
written by jummy84

My first introduction to Bill Nighy came via the vaguely lecherous “washed-up pop star” he so expertly plays in the backbone of the British Christmas canon, Love Actually. I was probably (definitely) too young to understand any of the jokes, but since that first fateful viewing, I’ve watched it enough times to recite the script start to finish—a limited-use party trick that’s not particularly enjoyable for whoever’s watching it with me. And, though my repertoire of comfort films has grown, Nighy has remained a constant: whether I’m hysterically crying through About Time or rewatching Emma and Chalet Girl for the millionth time, his unique breed of British stoicism and understated style is always there.

Beyond his extensive acting credits, Nighy has become quietly famous for his no-nonsense opinions on the machinations of life and regular sightings in and around London cafés. Meanwhile, his penchant for clothes has led to a partnership with the heritage knitwear brand John Smedley. The love story between Nighy and Smedley dates back over five decades, though it’s only recently that the actor has stepped out of the role of long-time wearer and into the creative collaborator seat to produce a collection of ’40s-inspired twinsets and long johns, in addition to the merino and cashmere classics.

With its discreet doodles and a “Stay Modern” mantra woven into the collection, Nighy hopes he “hasn’t done anything to disturb the average customer,” adding that “the people who buy John Smedley are pretty committed to the brand, but I’ve committed to crimes.” And for anyone in need of more sage soundbites from the star, you’re in luck: he’s just launched the podcast Ill-Advised by Bill Nighy, which allows listeners to call in for words of wisdom, no matter how trivial. Getting a head start on proceedings, Vogue sat down with Nighy to discuss his mod origins, what makes a decent pair of trousers, and why it’s never acceptable to be sock-less.

October 11, 2025 0 comments
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Bill Burr Defends Appearance at Saudi Arabia Comedy Festival: "They're Just Like Us"
Music

Bill Burr Defends Appearance at Saudi Arabia Comedy Festival: “They’re Just Like Us”

by jummy84 October 2, 2025
written by jummy84

Bill Burr has defended his decision to perform at the controversial Riyadh Comedy Festival in Saudi Arabia. On the latest episode of his podcast, the comedian gushed about his “great” experience in the Middle East, concluding that the people there are “just like us.”

Burr explained how a warm-up gig in Bahrain helped him gauge what would be acceptable for his set at the Saudi festival, whose lineup also features Dave Chappelle, Louis C.K., Aziz Ansari, and Pete Davidson.

“Standup is new to this part of the world, so they always have fucking restrictions and shit when you go over there,” he stated. “So the first time you do a new country in the Middle East, it’s fucking hilarious. You go on stage and you’re sitting there going like, ‘Am I going to get arrested?’”

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According to Burr, security guards at the Bahrain show reassured him that all his material was “fine here” and would also be acceptable in Saudi Arabia. He then went to a bar where he was “observing all the people” and their interactions, only to realize, “These guys, they’re just like us… I don’t speak the language, but I get it.”

When he flew into Saudi Arabia, Burr felt a renewed nervousness, but relaxed after seeing that they had the same fast food restaurants.

“I literally think I’m going to land, you know, and everybody’s going to be screaming, ‘Death to America,’ and they’re going to have like fucking machetes and want to like chop my head off, right?” he recalled. “‘Cause this is what I’ve been fed about that part of the world. I thought this place was going to be really tense. And I’m thinking, ‘Is that a Starbucks next to a Pete’s Coffee next to a Burger King next to a McDonald’s… They got a fucking Chili’s over here.’”

Burr then addressed the initial restrictions for the festival, which were eventually negotiated down to avoiding jokes about religion and not making fun of the royals.

“When they first went to set it up over there, the rules on what they had about what you could and couldn’t say in Saudi Arabia, [organizers were told], ‘If you want some good comedians, this isn’t going to work,’” he said. “And, to their credit, they said, ‘Alright, what do we got to do?’ And they just negotiated it all the way down to just a couple things.”

Even with those rules in mind, Burr was hesitant to do his bit about going to a gym with “a bunch of gay guys there.” Once the crowd started laughing, however, he decided to push the envelope.

“I’m checking out the diplomats as I’m doing this stuff, and they’re all fucking laughing,” he said. “All of a sudden, I start getting in the zone. Ol’ Billy’s feeling loose up there. My brain just goes, ‘Gay gym.’ And then the other part of my brain says, ‘Don’t do that.’ And then I said, ‘Fuck it. I’m going to do it.’ So I started doing the joke and it fucking murdered. They all loved it. And at that point, I was just like, ‘Ah, fuck it. I’m just doing my act.’ So I did my act. Did the whole thing.”

Unsurprisingly, Burr came away from the experience with a sense of optimism. “It was great to experience that part of the world and to be a part of the first comedy festival over there in Saudi Arabia. I think it’s going to lead to a lot of positive things,” he concluded. “The royals loved the show. Everyone was happy. The people who were doing the festival were thrilled… The comedians that I’ve been talking to were just saying, ‘Dude, you can feel [the audience] wanted it. They want to see real stand-up comedy.’ It was a mind-blowing experience. Definitely top three experiences I’ve had.”

Burr’s defense comes as fellow comedians David Cross, Marc Maron, and Shane Gillis have spoken out against Saudi Arabia’s latest effort to whitewash its reputation for human rights abuses and restrictions on free speech.

In an open letter, Cross wrote, “I am disgusted, and deeply disappointed in this whole gross thing… We can never again take seriously anything these comedians complain about (unless it’s complaining that we don’t support enough torture and mass executions of journalists and LGBTQ peace activists here in the states, or that we don’t terrorize enough Americans by flying planes into our buildings).”

Maron posted a social media clip captioned, “Selling out in Riyadh,” in which he referenced Saudi Arabia’s alleged role in 9/11 and the assassination of dissident Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

Gillis claimed he turned down a “significant bag” to perform at the festival to take “a principled stand,” even after the offer was doubled.

October 2, 2025 0 comments
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A split image of Bill Maher and Jimmy Kimmel
TV & Streaming

Bill Maher Defends Kimmel While Reflecting on His 9/11 ABC Controversy

by jummy84 September 20, 2025
written by jummy84

Bill Maher is sharing his opinion on ABC’s decision to indefinitely preempt Jimmy Kimmel Live!, with his perspective as a fellow late night host who endured his own share of controversy while on air with the same network.

The Real Time host wasted no time addressing the suspension of Jimmy Kimmel’s show at the top of his monologue, where he started, “Well, I guess you all heard Jimmy Kimmel, my friend, my compatriot, he’s canned by ABC for comments he made about Charlie Kirk’s assassin.”

“The day right after [he made the comments], the head of the FCC said he’s gonna revoke ABC’s license,” Maher added. “Let me just tell you something: I am not intimidated by the FCC. And if President Trump is watching, I have one thing to say to you — have you lost weight?”

He then addressed his own controversy that arose in 2001 while hosting ABC’s Politically Incorrect.

“It was 24 years to the day that I made comments on ABC that got me canceled from that network, and Jimmy Kimmel took my slot at Politically Incorrect. Oh yes, I got canceled before cancel even had a culture,” he said. “This s*** ain’t new. It’s worse, we’ll get to that, but you know, ABC, they are steady. ABC stands for ‘Always Be Caving.’”

Maher defended Kimmel, noting, “Jimmy, pal, I am with you, I support you, and on the bright side, you don’t have to pretend anymore that you like Disneyland.” Later in his monologue, he showed him even more support, further referencing the end of his tenure with ABC.

“Jimmy, let me just say, you did a great, funny show for two decades,” Maher said. “You should be proud of that. If this firing goes for you the way it did for me, you’ll get 23 years on a better network.”

Maher faced a wave of backlash 24 years ago when he made remarks about the 9/11 hijackers under a week after the attacks occurred on an episode of ABC’s Politically Incorrect. The series was one of the first late now shows to return to air following the terrorist attacks, as the episode arrived on Sept. 17, 2001.

There, conservative commentator Dinesh D’Souza argued against the notion that the hijackers were “cowards,” stating, “Not true. Look at what they did. First of all, you have a whole bunch of guys who are willing to give their life. None of them backed out. All of them slammed themselves into pieces of concrete. These are warriors. And we have to realize that the principles of our way of life are in conflict with people in the world. And so — I mean, I’m all for understanding the sociological causes of this but we should not blame the victim. Americans shouldn’t blame themselves because other people want to bomb them.”

Maher responded, “But also, we should — we have been the cowards, lobbing cruise missiles from 2,000 miles away. That’s cowardly. Staying in the airplane when it hits the building, say what you want about it, it’s not cowardly.” Following his remarks, he issued an apology and ABC released a statement in support of Politically Incorrect.

The series was not pulled from air, though the show was canceled after the 01-02 season. A few months after the end of Politically Incorrect, ABC notably announced a new late night show with Kimmel.

Maher sat down with Joe Manchin and Alex Wagner during the panel segment of the Friday episode of Real Time, where he noted a past X post made my Charlie Kirk discussing free speech in the United States.

“Here’s the ultimate irony, though. Charlie Kirk said, ‘Hate speech does not exist legally in America.’ By the way, I’ve always been on the same page,” he started, before continuing to read Kirk’s post. “‘Hate speech does not exist legally in America,’ says Charlie Kirk. ‘There’s ugly speech. There’s gross speech. There’s evil speech. And all of it is protected by the First Amendment. Keep America free.’ Could you guys at least honor the person you’re insisting that we honor by honoring his words?”

Earlier in his monologue, Maher noted that he didn’t agree with Kimmel’s comments, but noted “he shouldn’t lose his job for it.” He also addressed the silence from The View panel on the matter.

“I gotta say, and I’m friendly with the ladies on The View, but they didn’t say anything about [Kimmel’s suspension] this week. Nothing,” he said. “You know, ’cause it’s never been their thing to weigh in on the issues. It’s just an upbeat party show, that’s why they hired people named Joy and Sunny and Whoopi.”

Maher continued, “Girls, go out strong, OK? It won’t kill you. I promise it’s happened to me, and I may go out after this show. We don’t know.” In tune with the heavy news cycle, he, too, tackled Trump’s lawsuit against The New York Times that was dismissed on Friday.

“Now, Trump is going after The New York Times. He sued them for $15 billion. He said they’re a ‘mouthpiece of the Democratic Party.’ You know what, Don? They are. You’re right, and that’s their right to be that,” he said. “Like there’s not a thousand people on the right who are your mouthpiece. Okay, that’s how we work in this country.”

Maher’s take on the preemption of Jimmy Kimmel Live! comes a day after many late night TV hosts — including Stephen Colbert, Jimmy Fallon and Seth Meyers — voiced their disapproval on the indefinite suspension. On Thursday night, most of the late night shows aired their first taped episode since ABC revealed their decision, where Colbert defended Kimmel.

Jimmy Kimmel Live! was “pre-empted indefinitely” by ABC on Wednesday shortly after Nexstar released a statement noting they would not air the planned episode and would preempt the long-running talk show for the foreseeable future. 

The backlash stemmed from Kimmel’s remarks about Tyler Robinson, the alleged shooter of Charlie Kirk. “We hit some new lows over the weekend with the MAGA gang desperately trying to characterize this kid who murdered Charlie Kirk as anything other than one of them and doing everything they can to score political points from it,” Kimmel said.

Following Kimmel’s comments during his monologue, Federal Communications Commission chair Brendan Carr went on a podcast on Wednesday where he publicly spoke out against Kimmel and urged affiliates to “push back” on ABC. Later in the day, it was announced that Kimmel was suspended.

A source told The Hollywood Reporter Kimmel was planning to address the backlash on Wednesday night’s show, which was canceled. He prepared to explain what he said and how it was taken out of context. The source added that Kimmel did not intend to apologize.

David Letterman voiced his opinion on the suspension on Thursday during a panel at the Atlantic Festival. “I feel bad about this because we all see where this is going, correct? It’s managed media. And it’s no good. It’s silly. It’s ridiculous,” he said. “You can’t go around firing somebody because you’re fearful or trying to suck up to an authoritarian criminal administration in the Oval Office. That’s just not how this works.”

September 20, 2025 0 comments
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Bill Maher Voices Support For Jimmy Kimmel, Takes Shots At ABC
TV & Streaming

Bill Maher Voices Support For Jimmy Kimmel, Takes Shots At ABC

by jummy84 September 20, 2025
written by jummy84

This week, Bill Maher walked out in front of his live audience to a standing ovation, as the Real Time with Bill Maher host addressed ABC‘s suspension of Jimmy Kimmel Live!, comparing it to his own cancellation over two decades ago by the same network.

“I know why you’re happy tonight: I’m still on,” the late-night host said before beginning his monologue.

Maher continued, “Talk show hosts are going down like Blockbusters in the ’90s … Let me just tell you something, I am not intimidated by the FCC, and if President Trump is watching, I have one thing to say to you: Have you lost weight? You look terrific,” to audience cheers and laughs.

“No, that’s not me, and never will be,” Maher added, “but life is f—ing weird. It was 24 years to the day that I made comments on ABC that got me canceled from that network, and Jimmy Kimmel took my slot at Politically Incorrect. I got canceled before cancel even had a culture.” (In the aftermath of 9/11, Maher disagreed with the suggestion that the perpetrators were “cowards,” arguing instead that the U.S. was cowardly for “lobbing cruise missiles from 2,000 miles away.” The comments caused an uproar, leading to major sponsors pulling their ads and local affiliates yanking the program. Afterward, as Maher mentioned, Kimmel was brought in to fill ABC’s late-night role.)

Maher’s support for his colleague comes after multiple late-night hosts — from David Letterman to Seth Meyers to Jay Leno — decried ABC’s preemption of Jimmy Kimmel Live! as an infringement on free speech following host Jimmy Kimmel’s joke about Donald Trump‘s seeming lack of grief over the killing of ultra right-wing spokesman Charlie Kirk: “We had some new lows over the weekend with the MAGA gang desperately trying to characterize this kid who murdered Charlie Kirk as anything other than one of them and with everything they can to score political points from it,” he had said, in part.

ABC’s indefinite suspension of the program came after FCC chair Brendan Carr threatened action over the joke — which poked fun at Trump being in the “construction” stage of grief for his segueing from a reporter’s question about how he is “holding up” into the remodeling being done on the White House ballroom — and following Nexstar, the largest TV station group in the country, pulling the show for the “foreseeable future.” The company later clarified it did so “unilaterally” sans FCC pressure. Meanwhile, Sinclair Broadcast Group, the second largest national station operator and largest owner of ABC affiliate stations, said it would not lift the suspension until Kimmel had apologized to Kirk’s family and made a “meaningful donation” to his conservative nonprofit organization Turning Point USA. As such, the company replaced its Kimmel slot with a tribute to Kirk.

Meanwhile, as Trump celebrated the news, implying that Meyers and Jimmy Fallon are next up for removal, Democratic leaders penned a joint statement over the matter, as the top Democrat on the House Oversight Committee vowed he would launch a formal investigation. In Hollywood, guilds have reacted with fervor, with writers and actors protesting at the Disney lot in Burbank, and top talent — from Damon Lindelof to She-Hulk star Tatiana Maslany — either announcing they will not work with Disney in the aftermath or calling for consumer boycotts of properties like Hulu and Disney+. Andor writer and recently minted Emmy winner Dan Gilroy penned a guest column in Deadline denouncing the “venomous evil” and governmental “siege.”

The move by ABC was also blasted by leading conservatives like Ted Cruz and former Disney CEO Michael Eisner. In the latest development today, an ABC Sacramento affiliate, the site of a protest the day prior, was hit with gunfire; no one was injured.

“This sh– ain’t new; it’s worse, we’ll get to that, but ABC, they are steady,” Maher said. “ABC stands for Always Be Caving. So, Jimmy, pal, I am with you, I support you, and on the bright side, you don’t have to pretend anymore that you like Disneyland.”

Maher continued in his monologue, calling the “intimidation on the right” “so hypocritical.” He made several jokes about corporate kowtowing, including how Good Morning America has changed its name to add the postscript “even the scum who didn’t vote for Trump” and that next year’s Golden Bachelor will be Rudy Giuliani. He added that even Wolf Blitzer would be reporting from “The Capitulation Room” (CNN’s program, with Blizter and Pamela Brown, is called The Situation Room).

During the show, Maher called out the hosts of The View for ignoring Kimmel’s sidelining for the second day in a row “you know, ’cause it’s never been their thing to weigh in on the issues … it’s just an upbeat party show — that’s why they hired people named Joy [Behar] and Sunny [Hostin] and Whoopi [Goldberg].” (Yesterday, Carr threatened regulatory scrutiny on the talk show, citing the FCC’s equal time rule as his reason for considering such action.)

Maher noted that he didn’t think what Kimmel said “was exactly right,” but maintained he “doesn’t deserve to lose his job over it.”

He added, “It is a fool’s errand to try to say that these nuts who do these things are any ‘team’ … This kid [alleged Kirk shooter Tyler Robinson] is in his basement with VR goggles on, getting virtually ass-f—ed by a cartoon wombat [via the game Furry Shades of Gay 3: Still Gayer], and you’re gonna put politics into this? This kid doesn’t belong in either party, he belongs in a straitjacket.”

Concluding, Maher addressed Kimmel directly: “Pal, you did a great, funny show for two decades; you should be proud of that. If this firing goes for you the way it did for me, you’ll get 23 years on a better network.”

September 20, 2025 0 comments
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Split image of Bill Maher and Charlie Kirk
TV & Streaming

Bill Maher Condemns ‘People Who Mocked’ Charlie Kirk’s Death

by jummy84 September 14, 2025
written by jummy84

Bill Maher addressed Charlie Kirk’s assassination during Friday night’s episode of Real Time, where he started the episode off by noting that it had been a “very ugly week in America.”

During his opening monologue, Maher touched on the current state of politics in the United States in the wake of the shooting. He began, “It’s a very ugly week in America with violence of all kinds: political violence, regular violence, a lot of people talking about a civil war.”

“And then today in Congress, because Charlie Kirk got assassinated, [Colorado Representative] Lauren Boebert stood up and said, ‘We need to have a prayer.’ So they started to have a silent prayer. And then she started screaming, ‘No! Silent prayers get silent results.’ As if praying out loud gets big results,” Maher continued. “Then the Democrats started screaming at her that there was a school shooting in her state. I tell you, so far, the civil war is not very civil.”

Conservative activist Charlie Kirk was killed Wednesday on the campus of Utah Valley University after an assassin’s bullet struck his neck while he was hosting a student’s event. He was discussing mass shootings in the U.S. when he was struck. On Friday, Tyler Robinson was identified as the suspect in the assassination and was brought into custody.

Maher went on to address President Donald Trump’s answer to a question he was asked on Fox & Friends about how to “fix this country” and “come back together” in the wake of a major political divide.

“Today, they asked the President, ‘What are you going to do to bring the country together?’” he recited. “And he said, ‘I know this is going to get me in trouble, but I could care less.’ He’s a different kind of cat. His message is, ‘Let the healing stop.’”

Later in the episode, Maher sat down with Ben Shapiro and and Tim Alberta, where they spoke about Kirk’s death in length. There, the Real Time host condemned “the people who mocked his death or justified it.”

“I like everybody, I talk to everybody, I’m glad I took that approach. But he was shot under a banner that said, ‘Prove me wrong,’ because he was a debater, and too many people think that the way to do that — to prove you wrong — is to just eliminate you from talking altogether,” he said. “So the people who mocked his death or justified it, I think you’re gross. I have no use for you. The people who are saying now we’re at war, I’ve no use for you.”

He further addressed the widespread reaction Kirk’s assassination sparked on social media.

“The governor of the state said, ‘Social media is a cancer,’ which I think is true because when you read some of the comments from people, they really are in such a bubble that they don’t understand that it’s happening on both sides,” Maher added. “And I think the only way this starts to get better is if both sides admit, ‘OK, let’s not have this debate about who started it. Let’s not debate about who’s worse because, plainly, both sides do it now.’ And the right has done it too. A lot.”

Following Kirk’s death, Hollywood and political figures took to social media to share their reactions and tributes to the late MAGA activist. President Donald Trump announced his death on Truth Social, writing, “No one understood or had the Heart of the Youth in the United States of America better than Charlie. He was loved and admired by ALL, especially me, and now, he is no longer with us. Melania and my Sympathies go out to his beautiful wife Erika, and family. Charlie, we love you!”

Late night host Jimmy Kimmel took to Instagram, where he wrote, “Instead of the angry finger-pointing, can we just for one day agree that it is horrible and monstrous to shoot another human? On behalf of my family, we send love to the Kirks and to all the children, parents and innocents who fall victim to senseless gun violence.”

September 14, 2025 0 comments
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