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Pete Davidson Defends Saudi Gig, Blames "Losing Millions" on Ferry
Music

Pete Davidson Defends Saudi Gig, Blames “Losing Millions” on Ferry

by jummy84 November 10, 2025
written by jummy84

Pete Davidson returned to the Weekend Update desk on this week’s episode of Saturday Night Live, where he addressed the money he and Colin Jost are losing on the decommissioned Staten Island ferry they purchased in January 2022.

Holding up a recent New York Times article about the ill-fated purchase, Davidson used the opportunity to defend his performance at the controversial Riyadh Comedy Festival. “In case you’re wondering why I had to do a show in Saudi Arabia, we’re losing millions on this ferry,” he joked. “I assume that’s what the article says. I can’t spend $5 on a paywall when I got a kid on the way.”

With Dave Chappelle, Bill Burr, and Louis C.K. also on the bill, Davidson wasn’t the only comedian to face backlash for his performance. However, the criticism was especially pointed toward Davidson, whose father died while responding to the 9/11 attacks on the World Trade Center. The Saudi Arabian government, which is currently named in a lawsuit alleging the kingdom’s role in funding the attack, sponsored the festival.

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Davidson referenced the 9/11 connection during the segment, while revisiting the bit that Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is purportedly Weekend Update co-anchor Colin Jost’s uncle: “I understand RFK. You know, I wouldn’t be famous without my dad dying, either. Thank god that happened. Wouldn’t trade it.”

This isn’t the first time Davidson has defended the Saudi performance as just another gig. In a September appearance on Theo Von’s This Past Weekend podcast, he dismissed claims that the festival was an attempt to “comedy-wash” the Saudi government’s atrocious human rights record. “I’ve been getting a little bit of flak just because my dad died [in] 9/11,” he said at the time. “So they’re like, ‘How could you possibly go there?’”

As is often the case, the simple answer is money.

Returning to the topic of the ferry, Davidson took a jab at SNL creator Lorne Michaels by referencing reports that Tina Fey could soon take over as executive producer. “If Lorne Michaels has taught us anything, it’s that you never, ever give up,” he said. “Even if everyone says the time has come and Tina Fey is ready to take over.”

According to the New York Times report, Davidson and Jost’s LLC, Titanic 2, is currently being sued for $13,500 in “outstanding obligations” on their ferryboat, John F. Kennedy. They purchased the vessel for $280,100 nearly four years ago in a move that Jost once described as “the dumbest and least thought-through purchase I’ve ever made in my life.”

It’s currently sitting unused in a Staten Island shipyard, with grandiose plans for a restaurant, concert venue, and movie theater left unrealized.

November 10, 2025 0 comments
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Mega Millions Jackpot Jumps to $843 Million, 8th Largest in Game History
Celebrity News

Mega Millions Jackpot Jumps to $843 Million, 8th Largest in Game History

by jummy84 November 9, 2025
written by jummy84

Mega Millions Jackpot Jumps to $843 Million, 8th Largest in Game History

The Mega Millions grand prize has climbed to an estimated $843 million, making it the eighth-largest jackpot in the game’s history, lottery officials said. The winning numbers will be drawn Friday at 11 p.m. ET.

According to Mega Millions, Friday’s drawing will be the 38th since the jackpot was last hit on June 27 in Virginia. That run marks the longest stretch without a jackpot winner since the game launched in 2002, surpassing the previous record of 37 drawings set on Jan. 22, 2021, when a $1.050 billion prize was won in Michigan.

“While the jackpot remains elusive, the number of winners – and total prizes won – continues to grow,” lottery officials said. They noted that during the current run, there have been nearly 11.7 million winning tickets across all prize levels, with total payouts exceeding $274 million. Officials attributed the higher overall prize amounts to “significant enhancements in the lower-tier prizes” made after the game changed in April. So far, 256 third-tier tickets — worth between $20,000 and $100,000 — have also been sold in this streak. Even though no one matched all six numbers in the most recent drawing on Nov. 4, officials emphasized that players are still winning substantial amounts. “In the Nov. 4 drawing alone, there were 606,046 winning tickets across all prize tiers, for total nationwide winnings of more than $12.2 million,” Mega Millions said.


November 9, 2025 0 comments
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Russell Simmons Owed Millions to His Accusers. Have They Found Justice?
Music

Russell Simmons Owed Millions to His Accusers. Have They Found Justice?

by jummy84 November 3, 2025
written by jummy84


S
ince 2018, Russell Simmons has been living the life of a well-heeled holy man primarily in Bali, cultivating an aesthetic that falls somewhere between Eat, Pray, Love and alternative-medicine practitioner. Calling himself a yogi and professing wellness expertise — he has been promoting his 2015 vegan cookbook on Instagram — the Def Jam Recordings co-founder posted an exuberant selfie with a group of apparent religious pilgrims earlier this year, with the caption: “The goal is self discovery when one knows the self she/he makes life a moving prayer.… he should practice living in prayer ❤️ and one day in this lifetime or the next all suffering stops…” This introspection has also served as a business opportunity: Simmons is a founder and investor in the Gdas Bali Health and Wellness Resort, “the destination for devotional and wellness practitioners,” he wrote on Instagram.  

His Instagram account is filled with dedications to his family, yoga mentors, and old-school rapper friends — “It has probably been at least one year since I missed 8 am meditation,” he wrote in August — with Simmons noting recently that “Govinda das Ananda (god’s blissful servant) was the name given to me by krishna,” and writing that one woman’s introduction to yoga and meditation “inspire[s] me to keep serving.”

However full the pioneering hip-hop mogul’s island life might appear, his relocation came amid numerous sexual-misconduct allegations back in the United States. For more than a year, Simmons’ continued residence in Bali dovetailed with allegations that he had yet to pay agreed-upon settlements to at least five women who have accused him of sexual misconduct.

Wendy Franco, Sil Lai Abrams, and Sherri Abernathy said in court papers filed in October 2024 that for more than a year, Simmons hadn’t paid 2023 agreements of more than $3 million total. Specifically, Simmons had agreed to pay Franco $515,000, and Abrams and Abernathy $1,265,000 each.

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Abernathy alleged that Simmons raped her in 1983, while Abrams claimed Simmons raped her a decade later in 1994. Franco has not publicly made claims against Simmons, but according to settlement paperwork filed in court, the settlement relates to alleged “physical injuries and sickness.” Documents filed in the legal proceedings also show that as of January 2025,, Simmons also owed a total of at least $8 million to three other accusers: Tina Klein-Baker, Toni Sallie, and Alexia Jones. These filings from earlier this year claimed that Simmons had paid only $220,000 total to them. (A firm spokesperson for Klein-Baker’s lawyer, Kenya Davis of Boies Schiller Flexner, said that “at this stage of litigation, the attorneys and clients could not comment.” The attorney for Sallie and Jones declined to comment and declined to make them available for this article.)

Rolling Stone sent a detailed list of questions related to the allegations of abuse and nonpayment to multiple attorneys representing Simmons. Simmons, through one of his attorneys, Imran Ansari, declined to comment. Two days after Rolling Stone sent Simmons questions for this article, a lawyer for Franco, Abrams, and Abernathy told Rolling Stone, “The matter has been resolved,” but declined to provide any additional details. Lawyers for Simmons did not reply to additional inquiries on the nature of the resolution, and it remains unclear what conditions and parameters, if any, are included in the resolution or how much money, if any, the women have received.

Wendy Franco, Sherri Abernathy and Sil Lai Abrams in New York in August.

Photograph by Dana Scruggs for Rolling Stone

Meanwhile, Simmons has gone on the attack in response to allegations against him. This summer, he filed a defamation suit against HBO and Amy Ziering and Kirby Dick, the filmmakers who produced On the Record, a 2020 documentary featuring interviews with several Simmons accusers. (Simmons’ lawyer claimed “credible information, persuasive evidence, [and] witness statements” supporting Simmons were “disregarded” in the making of the film. HBO’s parent company, Warner Bros. Discovery, said in a statement to Rolling Stone that the lawsuit “lacks both merit and substance” and that they “stand behind the documentary.” The suit is ongoing.) 

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The settlement papers with Franco, Abrams, and Abernathy do not detail specific accusations — like Franco’s, the other two settlements reflect that “[t]he Settlement Amount constitutes a payment for damages for Claimant’s alleged personal, physical injuries and sickness” — nor does Simmons admit wrongdoing in the settlements, which state that his payment does not imply “any admission of liability, fault, or wrongdoing.” Sallie and Jones’ settlements also state that the agreements do not admit any liability of wrongdoing, nor specify exact allegations.

In interviews with Rolling Stone prior to the resolution, Franco, Abrams, and Abernathy largely described Simmons’ apparent delay in payment as another emotional blow in the already-arduous process of legal action against him. His nonpayment, which spanned more than a year at the time of these interviews, felt like another trauma.

“It was devastating,” Franco said in an April interview with Rolling Stone, before the resolution. “I just felt so stupid that I thought this person would follow through, that I thought that someone who could do what he did would turn around and acknowledge me and make some type of amends. You exposed yourself to this, and now this person again shows you that it doesn’t matter to him.” 

Simmons has said that “I own no property in the United States,” and has cried poverty in filings. His legal team, in a defamation suit filed by former music-industry executive Drew Dixon, who accused him of rape in 2017, said in September that he owes them more than $100,000 in fees. (Simmons has denied Dixon’s claims.) The attorneys also said that Simmons is unable to pay a $15,000 penalty imposed by the court on his legal team for missing a scheduled court hearing.

“You exposed yourself to this, and now this person again shows you it doesn’t matter to him.”

Wendy Franco

Dixon’s lawyer, Kenya Davis, shot back that Simmons has money, urging a New York judge to ignore Simmons’ “palpably false and self-serving claims of poverty.” Davis said that Simmons has a 75 percent stake in the Gdas resort and noted his “ongoing partnership with and ownership interest” in a Singapore-based talent agency.

Resolved or not, Franco, Abrams, and Abernathy’s years-long financial purgatory also exemplifies the unfulfilled promises of #MeToo. Women were encouraged to take action against men who had allegedly harmed them — often upending their lives in the process — only to find that the financial and emotional relief in coming forward might be ephemeral at best, nonexistent at worst. Simmons’ protracted nonpayment also reflects the logistical perils and broader challenges for anyone navigating the legal process. People can willingly enter into settlements — as Simmons did — but if they don’t pay, enforcement of these agreements could spiral into a labyrinthine and prolonged legal fight. 

“It could be indefinite,” says Daniel Tabak, a partner at the New York law firm Cohen & Gresser who focuses on bankruptcy and was not involved in any Simmons cases. “There’s no guarantee that [plaintiffs] will ever be able to collect.”

Meanwhile, Simmons’ financial liabilities don’t seem to have impeded his movements. On Aug. 11, he posted a video of himself and a fan to his Instagram shot in New York City. “NYC can be so magical,” he wrote. “Just met this wonderful young lady. She is full of love

A ‘Life-Changing Trauma’

For years, Franco dealt with her pain personally and alone, and tried as best as she could to avoid thinking about Simmons. “I did not follow Russell Simmons in any way. I was very averse to him and everything about him,” she says. Then came #MeToo. 

While Franco declined to discuss the specifics of her allegations — “Ms. Franco is reluctant to elaborate on her claims against Mr. Simmons, given his penchant for litigation,” her attorney, Andrew Wilson of Emery Celli Brinckerhoff Abady Ward & Maazel, tells Rolling Stone — she spoke openly prior to the resolution about the deep emotional toll of Simmons’ apparent failure to pay the settlement. 

“A lot of people were writing about their experiences with powerful men having abused them,” Franco tells Rolling Stone. She had come across accounts of women speaking out against Simmons and had learned about a documentary on him while it was already in progress. “I missed my opportunity to be in this film because it had already been done,” Franco says. “It was a letdown.”

Simmons, circa 1994.

Ron Galella/Ron Galella Collection/Getty Images

Franco contended with economic and family hardships from a young age. The 50-year-old came to the U.S. with her family from the Dominican Republic at age 11, and describes the move as “a lot of trauma.” She and her siblings were separated and scattered into foster homes during the immigration process. Franco says she was “pretty much living on my own by the age of 14” and staying with friends in New York.  

She wanted to act, but her dyslexia and need to learn English on her own scared her from reading in public. But Franco, who ultimately became enmeshed in the downtown New York City arts world, taught herself by “reading The Outsiders with a dictionary, listening to the Smiths, and translating.”

The resilience carried forward. Franco kept up with Simmons’ accusers through social media and discovered the Adult Survivors Act. The 2022 New York state law created a one-year window for adult survivors of sexual misconduct to file civil claims against their alleged abusers that otherwise would have exceeded the statute of limitations. “It felt like divine intervention,” she says, sometimes twirling a ringlet around her finger when she speaks. “It felt crazy and it worked out. I felt like a little bit of my history was validated. It was amazing.”

The settlement addressed a sense of dehumanization that had weighed on her for years. “It’s like a life-shifting, life-changing trauma that makes you doubt who you are and your value and your worth, and it means so little to the person who traumatizes you, who abuses you; it means nothing to them,” she says. “They might not even fucking remember it. So to have that person have to admit, even if it’s just to get you off their back, that you existed … it’s incredibly important.”

Abernathy — who as Sheri Sher was a founding member of the pioneering all-female hip-hop group Mercedes Ladies — describes a sense of empowerment in her decision to come forward. The 64-year-old former rapper still delivers her words enthusiastically, often smiling as she recalls the group’s music. She tells Rolling Stone that she worried about reprisal amid her already turbulent life had she come forward back in the 1980s. Abernathy’s family, consisting of her mother and 10 siblings, constantly faced eviction in New York City. Writing was her solace. She was frequently scribbling in black-and-white-speckled notebooks, covering one side in rhymes and the other with diary-like missives.

During one eviction, Abernathy recalls, city marshals took her composition book. “That really hurt me,“ she says. She crossed paths with Simmons a few times while she was pushing hard for Mercedes Ladies’ success. She has previously said that Simmons attacked her one evening after luring her to his office under the false pretence of a business conversation. 

Abernathy alluded to the alleged rape in her 2008 autobiographical novel, Mercedes Ladies, but did not name Simmons despite her friends’ encouragement to do so. She mulled naming him for four months, but ultimately decided against it. “I felt that if I came out,” she tells Rolling Stone, “I would have a lot of trouble on my hands.”

Wendy Franco

Photograph by Dana Scruggs for Rolling Stone

That changed in late 2017. Following allegations against Harvey Weinstein that October, more women were coming forward with sexual misconduct claims against powerful men in the entertainment industry, including music, notably leading to the conviction of R&B star R. Kelly and sprawling allegations against Marilyn Manson. (Manson has denied the claims.)

Model Keri Claussen accused Simmons of sexual assault in a November 2017 article in the Los Angeles Times. Less than two weeks later, screenwriter Jenny Lumet alleged in The Hollywood Reporter that Simmons sexually assaulted her. Three women, including Dixon, accused Simmons of rape in a Dec. 13, 2017, New York Times article. (Simmons is fighting Dixon’s defamation suit, in part by insisting that his broad denials of sexual misconduct on a podcast did not directly name her.) 

“I felt that if I came out [in 2008], I would have a lot of trouble on my hands.”

Sherri Abernathy

That same day, Abernathy was one of five women who accused Simmons of misconduct in a Los Angeles Times article. “I never really expected that all these women would come out. I thought I was the only one,” she says. “When it came out, I felt a little bit of empowerment behind it. I thought there was never gonna be justice, but justice did come out.”

Simmons has repeatedly denied the claims, saying in 2017 that “these horrific accusations have shocked me to my core, and all of my relations have been consensual.” He apologized in another statement for being “thoughtless and insensitive.” Weeks earlier, he said that he had “never committed any acts of aggression or violence in my life. I would never knowingly cause fear or harm to anyone.” 

The settlement “wasn’t about money,” says Abernathy, noting how she didn’t name Simmons despite her book coming out at the height of his fame. “I’m not a money person. I always worked and kept paying my own way.” For Abernathy, who recently retired after working as a New York state court officer for 20 years, the settlement meant that Simmons was “being held to account for his actions.”

Abrams, a writer and survivor advocate, says she was surprised that there might be any way to get justice. “When I first heard of the Adult Survivors Act, I was shocked that it would even pass. I always held reservations about it as a mechanism for justice, because I know how extensive sexual victimization is in our society,” she says. “We treat it as if it is this aberration, and while it is aberrant, unfortunately it is common. And one of the things we’ve learned from #MeToo was how widespread this issue is. It’s not something that just happens on the fringes of society.”

Abrams, who has said that she came from a chaotic home, told The Hollywood Reporter that she met Simmons in 1989. She had moved to New York City the prior year, and was working as a nightclub hostess. (She also worked as an executive assistant at Def Jam in 1992.) A few years after meeting Simmons, they had sex at various points. In 1994, Abrams saw Simmons for what she believed was a platonic meeting. She had previously told him she no longer wanted a sexual relationship and he agreed to that, according to her interview with The Hollywood Reporter. When they were out that night, Abrams has previously said, she was drinking alcohol while Simmons drank sparkling water, claiming he was sober. 

Later that evening, Abrams asked Simmons to direct his driver to bring her home, but she was driven to his apartment instead. Abrams said that she passed out on his bed with her clothes on. Abrams, who has said she was wavering in and out of consciousness, alleged that Simmons raped her despite her repeatedly saying no, and then directed her to leave his apartment because he was waiting for a romantic interest to call him. 

Sherri Abernathy

Photograph by Dana Scruggs for Rolling Stone

‘Living a Nightmare’

In November 2023, it seemed like things would finally come to a close for the three women. Simmons signed settlements with Abrams, Abernathy, and Franco and agreed to an October 2024 deadline for payment. These settlement agreements were confidential — meaning that the women were legally barred from disclosing the amount or even the existence of a potential settlement. Nobody would know that he paid the women a dime, obviating the possibility of additional bad press. As part of these settlements, Simmons also signed paperwork attesting that he owed them the settlement money and confirming the payment deadline. 

Because these statements effectively validated the settlements, they should have expedited enforcement. The statements also stipulated that if Simmons didn’t pay, the women’s attorneys could file these statements — and the total amounts owed — in court and make them public. 

Simmons blew past the deadline without paying any of the women. The women’s attorneys filed these statements in October 2024, publicly revealing that he had brokered confidential agreements, alongside the amounts. “I was looking at my phone every day,” Franco says of waiting for Simmons’ payment. When she spoke to her attorney at the deadline and learned that he hadn’t paid, “it was devastating.”  

“It just made me feel crazy. I cried for days. I was completely incapacitated,” she tells Rolling Stone. “I didn’t work for a little bit, and not because I’m melodramatic and [not because] I’m a fucking take-to-my-bed person.” Franco was angry. The burden of that limbo, she says, was “like an anchor.”

Abernathy voices similar sentiments. After a “very tedious and long” process, she and Simmons had come to an agreement, and for her, it seemed like it would be as over as it could be. “I thought, and I’m quite sure the rest of the girls thought, that Russell was going to keep [his promise].” When he delayed payment for more than a year, all the while leaning harder into his Zen vibe and luxe tropical lifestyle on social media, “it was just like living a nightmare over and over.”

“How do you go from the godfather of hip-hop to this broken, cornered animal on this tiny island? That’s quite sad.”

Sil Lai Abrams

Last spring, Abernathy underwent brain surgery for an aneurysm and was “in the hospital fighting for my life.” As a result, Abernathy says she must avoid stress and keep her blood pressure down. She also needs a clear head for a hopeful Mercedes Ladies project. “I didn’t want myself to get upset,” she said at the time of the ongoing nonpayment. “I didn’t want to start crying again.”

Abrams says the past year touched on her longstanding reservations about the legal process: “With the Adult Survivors Act, my concern was that once these cases began to be settled through the civil courts, a pushback would come [with] the narrative that had always existed: that the intention of a survivor coming forward is monetary gain.”

She says she still decided to give it a shot, going into the negotiation “with an open mind.” She was baffled at Simmons’ delay in upholding the agreement, saying the situation “just [kept] him tethered to all of us.”

“How do you go from the godfather of hip-hop to this broken, cornered animal on this tiny island?” Abrams says. “That’s quite sad.”

Abrams says the entire situation points “to the limitations that civil suits can have on actually bringing survivors some measure of justice that’s intended.”

Remaining Optimistic

The whole point of coming to a settlement is to avoid lengthy lawsuits and trials that can cost both sides more money. Most settlements include confidentiality clauses that not only conceal the settlement figure, but also bar anyone involved from publicly discussing it. When someone doesn’t pay, collecting the owed money isn’t as straightforward as sending an angry letter. The person with the purse strings could decide to stall or skip out on their tab. Attorneys can take them to court. A judge can order payment. Banks can be forced to comply. But if the money isn’t readily available, getting it becomes a challenging process.

“A sophisticated, wealthy defendant often can hide their assets in a way that makes it very difficult for plaintiffs to collect,” explains Tabak, the Cohen & Gresser lawyer who helmed Hulk Hogan’s legal team in Gawker’s bankruptcy, resulting in a $31 million settlement. 

Sil Lai Abrams

Photograph by Dana Scruggs for Rolling Stone

The state of Simmons’ finances remains unclear. For years, Simmons has been fighting his ex-wife, Kimora Lee, in court over millions of dollars in Celsius energy drink shares that the feds want to seize following the money-laundering conspiracy conviction of Kimora’s ex-husband Tim Leissner. (Through a rep, she declined to comment for this article.)

How exactly the Celsius case will play out is unknown — a recent court filing suggests that Simmons and Kimora might have come to some sort of agreement that’s yet to be finalized — but at the very least, Simmons has tens of millions on the line. Three of his accusers — Sallie, Baker, and Jones — have appeared in court filings as “interested parties” in the Celsius case, though it’s unclear if any of the disputed money would go to his accusers. 

Wilson, Franco’s attorney, has subpoenaed a business firm that works with Simmons for information about his finances. He has also subpoenaed one of Simmons’ daughters, Aoki Lee Simmons, for financial information. Wilson’s firm also sent Aoki Lee a letter dated April 4 warning that if she spent any of her father’s money, she could be on the hook for his nonpayment. (A rep for Aoki said he was not able to reach her for comment.)

Resolution aside, the months of waiting both took a toll and prompted questions for the women. “He has his freedom, technically, but he’s trapped in a prison of his own making, mentally and otherwise — he’s not dealing with reality,” Abrams said in July. “The reality is: He owes a significant number of people a significant amount of money. And that’s not going to get wiped away just because he chooses to hide on an island in the ocean.”

PRODUCTION CREDITS

Hair by SABRINA ROWE. Makeup by GREGG HUBBARD. Makeup Assistant: BLEN WASIHUN.

November 3, 2025 0 comments
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Must Read: Adidas Reports Record Q3 Net Sales, Ssense Owes Millions to Indie Fashion Brands
Fashion

Must Read: Adidas Reports Record Q3 Net Sales, Ssense Owes Millions to Indie Fashion Brands

by jummy84 October 29, 2025
written by jummy84


These are the stories making headlines in fashion on Wednesday. Adidas released its Q3 results on Wednesday, which showed record net sales of €6.6 billion ($7.7 billion). Footwear revenues for Adidas grew 11% on a currency-neutral basis, while apparel sales grew 16% during the quarter. …

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October 29, 2025 0 comments
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How ‘The Rock’ Made His Millions – Hollywood Life
Celebrity News

How ‘The Rock’ Made His Millions – Hollywood Life

by jummy84 September 22, 2025
written by jummy84

Image Credit: Deadline via Getty Images

Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson is more than just a wrestling legend — he’s one of the most recognizable stars in the world. From dominating the WWE ring in the late ’90s to becoming a Hollywood box-office powerhouse, Johnson has built an empire that spans movies, business ventures, and brand deals.

With his net worth climbing into the hundreds of millions, the 53-year-old shows no signs of slowing down. He’s set to star in A24’s highly anticipated film The Smashing Machine, playing MMA fighter Mark Kerr in what many expect to be one of his most transformative roles yet.

Learn more about his career and net worth below.

How Did Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson Get Famous?

Johnson first shot to fame in the late 1990s as “The Rock” in WWE, becoming one of professional wrestling’s most charismatic and popular stars. Known for his larger-than-life personality, catchphrases like “Can you smell what The Rock is cooking?” and his championship wins, he quickly became a household name. By the early 2000s, he successfully transitioned into Hollywood, with breakout roles in The Mummy Returns (2001) and The Scorpion King (2002), paving the way for a blockbuster movie career.

What Is Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson’s Net Worth?

As of 2025, Johnson’s net worth is estimated at $800 million, according to Celebrity Net Worth.

Back in 2022, Forbes ranked him among the world’s highest-paid entertainers, noting his net worth at around $270 million at the time

Is Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson Married?

Yes. Johnson has been married to Lauren Hashian, a singer and music producer, since 2019. The couple first met in 2006 while Johnson was filming The Game Plan, and they’ve been together ever since.

Before Lauren, Johnson was married to bodybuilder and businesswoman Dany Garcia from 1997 to 2008. Dany remains his longtime manager and business partner.

Does Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson Have Kids?

Yes — The Rock is a proud dad of three. He shares daughter Simone Garcia Johnson (born 2001) with his first wife, Garcia. Simone has followed in her father’s footsteps, signing with WWE under the ring name Ava Raine. With Hashian, he has two younger daughters: Jasmine (born 2015) and Tiana (born 2018).

September 22, 2025 0 comments
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How the Late-Night Host Made His Millions – Hollywood Life
Hollywood

How the Late-Night Host Made His Millions – Hollywood Life

by jummy84 September 19, 2025
written by jummy84

Image Credit: Getty Images

For more than two decades, Jimmy Kimmel has been a fixture in late-night television, fronting Jimmy Kimmel Live! on ABC since 2003. His sharp humor and hosting skills have made him a go-to personality not just for his nightly show but also for major events like the Oscars and the Emmys. In September 2025, Kimmel picked up a Creative Arts Emmy for Outstanding Host for a Game Show thanks to his work on Who Wants to Be a Millionaire.

Yet the win came at a turbulent moment: ABC moved to suspend Jimmy Kimmel Live! after backlash over his comments about Tyler Robinson, the suspect accused of killing conservative activist Charlie Kirk. The decision has thrown his future into question. The decision sparked strong reactions. “Some of the sickest conduct possible,” said FCC Chair Brendan Carr, who praised ABC affiliates like Nexstar for pulling the show. “We at the FCC are going to force the public interest obligation. There are broadcasters out there that don’t like it, they can turn in their license in to the FCC,” he added.

With his show on hold, many are now curious about the late-night star’s salary, career earnings, and overall net worth. Find out more below.

What Is Jimmy Kimmel’s Net Worth in 2025?

As of 2025, Jimmy Kimmel’s net worth is estimated at around $50 million, according to Celebrity Net Worth.

His decades-long career in late night, combined with hosting major events like the Oscars and producing other TV projects, has made him one of the wealthiest figures in comedy. Despite his show’s current suspension, Kimmel’s long run on Jimmy Kimmel Live! and steady stream of side projects have cemented his financial success.

BEVERLY HILLS, CALIFORNIA - MAY 02: Jimmy Kimmel attends the 28th Annual UCLA Jonsson Cancer Center Foundation's "Taste For A Cure" event at Beverly Wilshire, A Four Seasons Hotel on May 02, 2025 in Beverly Hills, California. (Photo by Tommaso Boddi/Getty Images for UCLA Jonsson Cancer Center Foundation)
BEVERLY HILLS, CALIFORNIA – MAY 02: Jimmy Kimmel attends the 28th Annual UCLA Jonsson Cancer Center Foundation’s “Taste For A Cure” event at Beverly Wilshire, A Four Seasons Hotel on May 02, 2025 in Beverly Hills, California. (Photo by Tommaso Boddi/Getty Images for UCLA Jonsson Cancer Center Foundation)

What Is Jimmy Kimmel’s Salary From ABC?

Kimmel reportedly earns $15 million per year for hosting Jimmy Kimmel Live! on ABC.

What Did Jimmy Kimmel Say?

Kimmel sparked backlash after his monologue comments about Tyler Robinson, the 22-year-old suspect accused of killing Kirk. On Jimmy Kimmel Live!, the host accused “many in MAGA land” of trying to “capitalize on the murder of Charlie Kirk” and said conservatives were “desperately trying to characterize this kid who murdered Charlie Kirk as anything other than one of them” in order to score political points.

An ABC spokesperson confirmed on September 17 that Kimmel’s show “will be pre-empted indefinitely” over the comments.

But prior to his monologue, Kimmel had posted a more somber message on social media. “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,” he wrote.

September 19, 2025 0 comments
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Colmesneil,TX -January 1:  Country Music Singer Songwriter George Jones and Nancy Jones sit on bed in their home on January 1, 1985 in Colmesneil,TX (photo by Beth Gwinn/Getty Images)
Music

He Stole George Jones’ Widow’s Heart. Then He Allegedly Stole Millions

by jummy84 August 28, 2025
written by jummy84


K
irk West didn’t look like a man trying to slip out of town unnoticed. Dressed in a $350 black-and-gold Versace-style shirt with a dragon perched on a champagne bottle on the back, the six-foot-six entrepreneur carried himself with the same air of confidence he’s projected for years. Yet, as the 58-year-old moved through Nashville International Airport on July 24, his life was about to implode. 

His downfall had begun weeks earlier, triggered by the discovery of an affair. Nancy Jones — the 78-year-old widow of country legend George Jones — threw him out of the contemporary European-style mansion they shared after she suspected him of cheating. The infidelity soon revealed a deeper betrayal: a stockpile of $400,000 in cash and a ledger containing $11.6 million in cryptocurrency missing from her safe, according to police and court records.

The discovery shattered a silver lining that came in the months after Jones’ death at 81 of hypoxic respiratory failure in April 2013. Considered one of country music’s greatest and most influential singers, Jones had dozens of hit songs, including “White Lightning,” “Near You,” with his ex-wife Tammy Wynette, and the heart-rending 1980 classic “He Stopped Loving Her Today,” widely considered one of the greatest country songs of all time.

Yet it was Nancy — Jones’ fourth wife and the June Carter Cash to Jones’ Johnny — who helped salvage his ailing reputation and pulled him out of his decades-long battle with alcohol and drug addiction to preserve and resurrect his legacy. The fiery, Louisiana-born mother was so determined to see Jones through his sobriety that she even sparred with local “cocaine pushers” in Alabama who were keeping Jones hooked on the drug, Jones wrote in his memoir, I Lived to Tell It All. “God put me with him to help him get the devil out of him,” Nancy reflected to The Tennessean in 2015. “God put me there to do a job, and I did it.”

Nancy had been distraught when the honky-tonk crooner died, and cherished what seemed to be a genuine friendship with West in the immediate months after Jones’ death that quickly blossomed into romance. But after 12 years together, Nancy now believes her chance meeting with West in the summer of 2013 wasn’t a coincidence. Instead, she claims, she was deliberately preyed upon.

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It was West’s well-established “modus operandi” to use his looks, gentlemanly manners, and veneer of a successful real estate career to exploit “wealthy, potentially vulnerable women,” according to Nancy’s July lawsuit against West to reclaim her missing fortune. (Through her attorney, Nancy declined to be interviewed for this article. “Due to pending proceedings, we can’t comment on the matter at the time,” her attorney Chris Thorsen says in a statement to Rolling Stone.)

Kirk West’s arrest

via Franklin Police Department

Nancy reported the theft to the police. The next day, deputies raced to intercept West at the airport, where he was holding a one-way ticket to the Philippines and accompanied by a woman in her forties, three well-placed sources who requested anonymity due to privacy concerns tell Rolling Stone. He was led away in handcuffs and charged with felony theft. (He has pleaded not guilty and faces between 15 and 60 years in prison if convicted.) 

The arrest made local headlines and on country-music websites for the bizarre situation that seemed like a cross between the scheming TV show Nashville and CNBC’s American Greed. But several people from West’s past tell Rolling Stone they weren’t surprised to learn of Nancy’s ordeal once they heard who was involved.  

“I never trusted him,” an old friend of Nancy’s who knew the couple for more than a decade, tells Rolling Stone. “George had just passed, and all of a sudden this guy shows up hanging around with Nancy; it’s kind of obvious what he was looking for. It seems to me that he was just looking for the widow’s money. But he’s hung around for a long time. I guess he was playing the long game.” 

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Over the past two decades, West — whose birth name is Kirk R. Leipzig — has left a trail of broken promises and financial ruin, nearly 10 former associates, ex-girlfriends, and people who knew him tell Rolling Stone. He is linked to a string of civil lawsuits, defaulted bank loans, a federal fraud conviction, and an arrest for violating a restraining order, on top of the recent theft charge. (Rolling Stone reached out to West’s attorney Dana C. McLendon with a detailed list of questions regarding Nancy’s claims, the criminal case, and accusations raised against West in various lawsuits, but the attorney declined to comment. “Neither Mr. West nor I will be making any comments to media at this time,” McLendon wrote in an email.)

The smooth talker has long been accused of convincing people to invest their life savings in his real estate opportunities and promising six-figure returns from flipping homes, only to hoard the profits. He especially targeted single mothers, sources allege, to prey on their vulnerabilities and milk them and their loved ones of cash before moving on to his next target.

“He is a guy that reads obituaries and preys on people,” says one former ex-girlfriend. “And I’m fairly confident that’s how he managed to get in touch with Nancy.”

Nancy Jones attends the George Jones Monument unveiling at the Woodlawn-Roesch-Patton Funeral Home and Memorial Park on November 18, 2013 in Nashville, Tennessee.

Rick Diamond/Getty Images

Auspicious Beginnings

In August 2013, Nancy Jones was in mourning after Jones’ death. Just two weeks before the singer was rushed to the hospital, Jones had taken the stage for what would be his final performance at a packed venue in Knoxville, Tennessee. A signature twinkle in his eye, Jones shifted into showman mode — a persona he first learned busking on the streets of East Texas as a kid. He cracked jokes and rose from his seat to deliver a poignant rendition of “He Stopped Loving Her Today.” Upon his death, country greats including Loretta Lynn, Alan Jackson, Merle Haggard, and Dolly Parton all heralded Jones as a defining voice of country music.

After three decades of marriage, Nancy was now left to oversee Jones’ legacy and manage Country Gold, their nearly 80-acre estate. Loving portraits of the couple graced its walls, a parlor organ sat untouched in a sunny room, and Jones’ fully functioning barber shop lost its lone patron. It all seemed too much to handle alone. “Our once vibrant home now seemed like a museum with George Jones memorabilia all over it,” Nancy wrote in her 2023 memoir, Playin’ Possum: My Memories of George Jones. “Friends stayed in touch and many visited often, but at night, when George and I had often snuggled in bed watching movies, the loneliness grabbed me by the heart and wouldn’t let go.”

As Nancy became serious about selling the home that summer, West pulled up for a tour, accompanied by Britney Spears’ father, Jamie Spears. “I arrived home just as they finished up and were walking through the backyard near the house,” Nancy wrote in her book. “I greeted them cordially and stepped over to shake hands with them.… Then Kirk West, the taller of the two men, smiled and said, ‘I’m a hugger.’ He gave me a great big bear hug.”  

West introduced himself as a real estate investor with a strong track record of delivering sizable returns. Along with some other investors, he said, he was interested in purchasing the storied estate. 

There was a Midwestern charm about the Wisconsin-raised West. He was polite and vocal about his faith in Christ, a trait that appealed to the religious Nancy. Although West didn’t strike a business deal that day, he earned something that would prove vastly more lucrative: Nancy’s trust and friendship. He began texting her, readily offering himself up to the widow, according to the lawsuit, whether she needed guidance or just as an emotional crutch during a difficult time.

But it was West who needed the support. Within a few weeks of their first meeting, according to Nancy’s lawsuit, West confessed he wasn’t the high-flying investor he had pretended to be. He allegedly claimed to be “penniless” and didn’t even have his own home. Not used to being alone in an empty 9,651-square-foot home, Nancy allowed West to move into a separate wing of the house that September. “Our relationship was strictly platonic, at least until Mr. West seduced me,” Nancy wrote in a court-submitted declaration. The following month, they were dating. 

It wasn’t long before people around Nashville learned about West’s relationship with Nancy. He had been spotted cruising around town in one of Jones’ cars — the country star’s infamous nickname “No Show” emblazoned on the license plate. 

A Trove of Lawsuits

Apart from news of his arrest, West keeps a low profile online. His LinkedIn is defunct, he has no obvious business websites, and only scraps of his background are public. What can be pieced together shows a man who reinvented himself repeatedly, leaving wreckage behind each time.

He began as a grocery store manager before recasting himself as a job-placement guru, a pivot that brought him to Nashville in the early 2000s. The business cycled through several names, but the one that stuck was JL Kirk Associates. At different times, West told people the “JL” stood for “Jesus Lord” or “Jesus Loves.”

George and Nancy pose at their Country Gold Farms in 2004.

George Walker IV/The Tennessean/USA TODAY NETWORK/Imagn

“More like Jesus laughs,” scoffs Tennessee blogger Katherine Coble, who tried to warn others about West back in 2007. Her husband had been cold-called by the firm with promises of securing a better-paying, executive role at a company — if he paid nearly $5,000 in headhunting fees upfront on a credit card. The intake interview, she wrote in a blog post, felt more like a predatory, emotional beatdown than a helpful consultation.

“I would discourage anyone who stumbles across this entry from even going through the JL Kirk & Associates ‘interview process,’” Coble added. Weeks later, Coble said she received a cease and desist from West’s attorney, demanding the post be removed or face a defamation lawsuit. Undeterred, Coble posted the demand letter in full on her blog. 

The entries drew hundreds of comments, and by year’s end, West quietly shuttered the office, according to an investigation by local news outlet NewsChannel 5. The station reported the Better Business Bureau received “dozens of complaints” from customers who claimed they had paid thousands of dollars each for jobs that never materialized. (The state Attorney General’s Office confirmed to the news station it had been investigating the firm, but no action was ultimately taken.)

By then, West had pivoted full-time. “Kirk Leipzig is turning foreclosed homes into cash,” a glowing 2008 Forbes write-up said. “All it takes is legwork, a line of credit, and a lack of emotion.”

The article painted West as a property shark with “a five-year cash hoard in the bank” and an eye for distressed properties. West boasted about flipping two homes within six weeks, making nearly half a million dollars in profit. The spread became a calling card for West, referring potential investors to the flattering piece as proof of both his trustworthiness and track record. 

But within a few years, lawsuits began stacking up, creating a complicated and extensive trail of court records. Some cases directly name West as the defendant, while others link back to his various LLCs and trust accounts. The lawsuits often contain hundreds of filings, with submissions of deeds, dense real estate contracts, and email correspondence.  

Banks accused West and his various LLCs of defaulting on mortgages. Mercedes-Benz came after him for skipping out on a $33,000 payment. The local paper claimed he stiffed them on advertising payments. His second wife sued him for $25,000 in unpaid child support. And investors alleged he was using their funds to buy properties, make cosmetic renovations, flip them fast, and pocket everything without even letting them know the house had sold. At least two lawsuits labeled West’s practices as Ponzi schemes. (According to court records, West vigorously defended himself against accusations of skipping out on payments to the paper and elsewhere, and denied he was running any Ponzi scheme.)

A middle-aged couple laid out West’s alleged scheme in a 2013 lawsuit against the entrepreneur. After reading West’s Forbes article, the husband and wife withdrew from their retirement fund, used a portion of their savings, and borrowed money from their adult son to invest $150,000 in a home West was flipping in August 2010. Allegedly promised a doubled return, they learned West sold the house a year later and never shared the profits. Only after confronting West did they manage to recoup $115,000, filing suit for the remaining $35,000. (West denied the claims of fraud, and the case was dismissed in late 2013 after the couple failed to meet a court deadline.)

Even West’s own attorney sued him. Scott Johannessen said he successfully fought off several fraud litigation claims against West, but after the house Johannessen was living in (which he rented from West) suddenly went into foreclosure, he filed suit in February 2014. Hoping to block the foreclosure of his family’s home, Johannessen listed seven alleged Ponzi schemes West was allegedly involved in between November 2011 and August 2013. 

He alleged West followed the same pattern in each instance. After West was “threatened by an attorney with a civil action and potential criminal prosecution for allegedly orchestrating and participating in a Ponzi scheme,” Johannessen claimed, West would settle “with monies [West] borrowed and/or otherwise secured from one or more third parties.” (The case was eventually moot after West’s LLC that was controlling the property declared bankruptcy.)

In early 2015 — nearly a dozen lawsuits later — West applied to change his last name from Leipzig legally, listing the reason as: “Don’t like my name. Always misspelled. Too hard,” according to court documents.

“If I would have googled his name, I would have stopped dead in my tracks,” says a former associate who says they lost their life savings and home because of West in the 2010s. 

Raising Suspicions

From the outset of their relationship, Nancy financially supported West. A nurturer to her core, she covered their living expenses, footed the cost of vacations to Cancun and Jamaica, and paid for his new Mercedes-Benz, according to her lawsuit.

Outfits and personal items from George Jones’ life at the George Jones Museum in Nashville, Tenn. in 2015.

Joe Buglewicz/The New York Times/REDUX

In return, West was Nancy’s confidant, advisor, business partner, and a spiritual mentor — she credited West with recementing her faith in Christ. West became so enmeshed in Nancy’s businesses that she entrusted him to help run the George Jones estate, although he “knew next to nothing about country music,” Nancy wrote in her book. Eventually, Nancy was able to net a reported $4.4 million from the sale of Country Gold, roughly the same amount she paid for the building that would house the George Jones museum.

West helped conceive the museum, which included a restaurant, gift shop, event space, and roofdeck bar. Named as general manager, he pulled shifts at the busy restaurant in the heart of Nashville right beside Nancy, who cleaned toilets and waitressed. When Nancy struck a deal with publishing company Concord Bicycle Music to purchase Jones’ music catalog for a reported $30 million in January 2016, West was listed as secretary for the record company and described himself as business manager for the estate. 

As West’s stock grew in the Nashville entertainment scene, his background and prior business dealings began to raise suspicions among Nancy’s closest friends. The concern materialized into a third-party investigative firm digging into West’s past to produce an extensive due-diligence background report. The October 2014 findings, obtained by Rolling Stone, were brutal, tracing more than a dozen state and federal lawsuits filed against West in Wisconsin and Tennessee.  

But the background report never made its way to Nancy. “I really didn’t trust him,” the old friend who ordered the report says. “Time went by, and she was still with him. I just let it be. I never showed it to her, because it seemed like she was happy.” 

There were other odd signs. In November 2013 — a month after West had moved in with Nancy — five items of jewelry had vanished from Nancy’s master-bedroom closet from the top of her safe, according to a police report obtained by Rolling Stone. The report listed West as a suspect, but the case seemingly went nowhere and was shut. (“Refus[al] to cooperate” was listed as the reason the case was concluded.)

But some did try to warn her about her new lover’s reputation. “I was frantically trying to get in touch with [a mutual friend] and say, ‘Look, you gotta help her — she’s getting ready to get swindled,” says one of West’s ex-girlfriends. “[Nancy] wouldn’t hear it.” 

‘Hell on Fire’ 

Nancy wasn’t the first woman to be swept up by West’s charm. 

“Here you go baby,” West emailed a woman who would later declare bankruptcy after going into a real estate deal with him in the 2010s. “I think I got it ready for your signature.” West walked her through the process so she could “be safe and have no worries of anyone ever touching” her belongings. He signed the note, “Daddy.”

Those who knew West describe him as being charming and outgoing. “You’d think he’s the nicest person in the world,” one well-placed source says. “But he’s really — believe me — very conniving, very wise in making you believe anything that he wanted you to believe.” 

Two ex-girlfriends, who wished to have their names withheld due to privacy reasons, claim West lovebombed them as he aggressively pursued them in the 2010s. (The women’s relationships with West overlapped, but they do not know each other.) Both were recently single mothers when they met West, who would turn up to volunteer around the house and gift them diamond jewelry. 

As the relationships soured, both claim West harassed and threatened them. One said she had to call the police, describing the scene with her children present as “hell on fire.” The other woman said she began sleeping with a pistol in her bedside table after claiming West dangled her from her home’s balcony, followed her in his car, and peered into her windows at night. 

Their claims echoed a restraining order filed against West by his third wife in July 2004, just a few months after he moved to Nashville. Filing for a divorce on grounds of adultery, inappropriate marital conduct, and irreconcilable differences, according to court records, the woman accused West of being controlling, as well as verbal and emotional abuse throughout their five-year marriage. (The woman declined to be interviewed by Rolling Stone.)

“Husband also has a violent temper and has for the last years of this marriage had an especially violent temper, cursing [at] the Wife and referred to her as ‘f…ing stupid’ and has used other vile and crude remarks,” the complaint, obtained by Rolling Stone, alleges. (West denied aspects of his ex-wife’s complaint in his own court submission and accused her of taking money from their joint account, but ultimately agreed they should divorce.) Simultaneously, she obtained an order of protection against him, claiming he had kicked down her locked bedroom door, left more than a dozen “harassing phone messages,” and threatened he would “hunt her down if she did not return his calls.” (West was arrested for violating the order, but the misdemeanor charge was later dropped.) 

The third ex-wife’s daughter and West’s former stepdaughter, Alesia Porter, tells Rolling Stone that her mother’s marriage to West was financially, emotionally, and verbally abusive, and that West isolated the mother and daughter from their relatives. There were two sides to West, she explains: the God-fearing, jovial family man, and the man they came to fear. “He never cracked in front of other people,” Porter says. “But as far as at home, he was always very abusive.” 

He was also a cheater, Porter claims. “He told my mom that he was going on a spiritual retreat, and she followed him to the airport and found another woman’s luggage tag and [that he was taking the woman on] a $10,000 vacation on [their] anniversary,” Porter says. 

“He has no remorse for anything, absolutely nothing,” she adds. “He thinks that he is untouchable. He thinks that he is his own God, and that everyone is beneath him.”

Luck Runs Out 

By July 2016, West’s luck finally ran out. Already named in more than a dozen federal and state lawsuits, Tennessee criminal prosecutors came knocking. He was charged with two counts of bank fraud for lying on a loan application to secure a mortgage on an investment property. Prosecutors said West inflated his income and net worth, posing as a real estate investor earning $300,000 a year, and submitted “fraudulent and forged documents,” according to the indictment.

Kirk West (third from left) posing with Nancy Jones in a press photo showing their Midsouth Emmy Awards 

Via Jeremy Westby/2911 Media

Nancy covered his legal fees, and that September, West pleaded guilty to the fraud charges. He was sentenced to a year of house arrest and ordered to pay nearly $1 million in restitution, a debt he allegedly persuaded Nancy to front. According to her lawsuit, West promised to pay her back but never did. 

West seemed to have her wrapped around his finger — an anomaly for the fearless Nancy, who once took a journalist on a three-wheeler ride just to dump them in a creek over what she said were false tabloid-style reports they’d penned about Jones and his tumultuous relationship with Wynette. In August 2021, West pushed Nancy to buy an over-the-top home listed at $5.9 million, complete with a temperature-controlled wine room, home bar, and billiards area, a well-placed source says. “He had a big say in it,” they say. “She went along with whatever he said because he could convince her into anything. He was that type of person.”

He also persuaded Nancy to get involved in cryptocurrency, becoming an “expert” while he served his house arrest from her home. Upon his insistence, Nancy bankrolled investments in a range of tokens, including DOGE and Ethereum. “Mr. West volunteered to access my accounts with [crypto-trading platforms] … in light of his assertion that I was far too inexperienced,” Nancy wrote in a sworn affidavit. “Each investment was funded by assets transferred from my personal bank account(s) and was performed by Mr. West on my behalf and for my benefit.”

From the outside, life looked stable after West’s conviction. He stuck by Nancy’s side after she caught a near-fatal case of Covid-19 in 2021, losing her hair and 70 percent of her lungs after they moved into their new home. Nancy said she died for 15 minutes before regaining consciousness. As she worked toward recovery, she had to learn how to walk again. West was her “warrior and defender throughout the hospitalization and rehabilitation,” Nancy wrote in her memoir. 

By February of this year, the couple appeared smiling together, posing with their Midsouth Emmys for executive producing Still Playin’ Possum, a George Jones tribute concert. But Nancy says the façade collapsed when she discovered West’s affair — and her missing money — in late June. 

West allegedly tried to pacify Nancy in the days after she learned about the stolen ledger, according to police documents, promising to “send five million dollars of the cryptocurrency funds back to her bank account” but was firm that was “all she would get.” That wasn’t good enough. Nancy filed a police report and hired a cryptocurrency forensic service firm to recover the funds and wrestle back more than $10 million worth of tokens. Nancy uncovered West’s affair at a fortuitous juncture: West seemed to have had every intention of hightailing it out of the country.

Kirk West’s mugshot photo

Franklin Police Department

Unbeknownst to Nancy, a woman who worked at a local store in the Nashville area had been telling co-workers about a new wealthy man who had entered her life, says a source who worked with the woman and asked not to be named for privacy reasons. (Rolling Stone is choosing not to name the woman and has reached out to her for comment.) In late April, she posted a video of a massive oval-cut diamond ring, marking herself “engaged” on Facebook. “Choose a man who cherishes God and loves you like no one ever could,” she wrote. On June 22, she uploaded a video that her “babe” surprised her with a beautiful floral arrangement and congratulation balloons to celebrate her last day of work. She was thrilled to be “embracing my new life as a full time wife and moving back to my country,” she wrote. 

By August, the woman appeared to have moved back to the Philippines. Last week, she was pictured smiling with family members. Taped to the wall was a large poster of West, the woman, and her teenage son. “Welcome home,” the sign read in cursive lettering. 

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But West never made it to the gathering after police caught up to him at the airport. Pleading not guilty to the Class A felony theft charge, West sat around in the county jail for two weeks until his attorney managed to reduce his $1 million bond down to $400,000 on July 29. (West bonded out on Aug. 5, with his next court date set for Oct. 7.)

For many who crossed paths with West, the reckoning feels overdue. “He is an emotional, financial, soul-sucking succubus,” says his former stepdaughter Porter. “He will latch onto you and take you for everything.”

August 28, 2025 0 comments
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Mo'Nique Slams Tyler Perry For Destroying Her Career + Claims 'You Cost My Family Millions' & Demands Public Apology
Celebrity News

Mo’Nique Slams Tyler Perry For Destroying Her Career + Claims ‘You Cost My Family Millions’ & Demands Public Apology

by jummy84 August 20, 2025
written by jummy84

Mo’Nique Slams Tyler Perry For Destroying Her Career + Claims ‘You Cost My Family Millions’ & Demands Public Apology

Mo’Nique is doubling down on her long-running feud with Tyler Perry, calling him out for what she says was a career-damaging falsehood.

Speaking on “Outlaws with TS Madison,” the Oscar-winning actress alleged Perry told “a lie” that derailed her livelihood. “And that lie cost me 12 years of my career,” she said.

Referring to Perry as “one of the biggest entertainers in the world,” Mo’Nique emphasized the emotional and financial toll his actions had on her.

“Tyler Perry, you cost my family millions and millions and millions of dollars,” she declared. “Until he fixes it, I will not stop.”

She called for Perry to publicly acknowledge his role, citing how he allegedly admitted during a private phone call that he regretted how he treated her.

“You publicly shamed me. So now you have to publicly fix it,” Mo’Nique insisted.

She also compared his behavior to that of Harvey Weinstein, accusing Perry of having a “God complex.”

If you recall, Mo has long accused Tyler or labeling her difficult to work with, leading to missed career opportunities.

Do you think these two will ever make amends?

VIA @tsmadison


August 20, 2025 0 comments
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