Day-time talk show host Wendy Williams uses her show more as a platform to show down things she doesn't like, than as a vehicle to discuss topics she finds interesting, and she uses her contributions in Life & Style to do the same. During recent weeks, she broke down the news by claiming Michele Obama was too catty to be First Lady, Alec Baldwin is too ungrateful to be famous and NeNe Leakes in too dirty to be an TV.
Wendy Williams seems pleasant on the surface, but her polite demeanor belies a very vindictive spirit.
When something sticks in her craw, and she has a pretty sticky craw, she can't help but demean that person publicly; it's just what she does.
When Alec Baldwin, who has literally had his private conversation with his ex-wife and daughter displayed by the American media for all the world to mock and judge, told New York magazine that he thought it best to retire from the lime light, Wendy Williams felt she just had to speak out (via Life & Style):
"This is an obvious cry for attention on Alec's part...He sounds ungrateful--and I think he should disappear."
But Alec shouldn't feel bad, because he is in good company.
Wendy Williams also recently railed against Michele Obama in the pages of Life & Style for having audacity speaking to the media about a subject she feel should be off limits:
"Can you believe that Michelle Obama time to comment on the down fall of Justin Bieber?
"Listen, Mrs. Obama, I think that whatever Justin is going through is very sad, too, but I don't want to see my first lady dabbling in messy teenage pop culture gossip."
Just last Thursday, Wendy sat right back and not only allowed Flipping Out's Jeff Lewis to make ugly comments about Real Housewives of Atlanta's NeNe Leakes, she even agreed with him (via The Wrap):
"I'm actually very happy that [NeNe] has this gig, because I feel like this last season we're watching right now, I feel like she has kind of regressed, taken a step backwards. I feel like she's getting a little dirty.
"I felt dirty...I felt like this has gone too far. I don't mind flipping tables, I don't mind screaming at each other, but when they start breaking ribs, that's where I'm like, ooh, this is a line."
Considering the way he treats his employees, Jeff really shouldn't be the one to talk about crossing lines of personal conduct, unless he is subliminally trying to tell Wendy something.
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