The Megyn Kelly Show - Roseanne Barr on Toxic Hollywood Betrayals and Surviving Cancel Culture, Plus Harry and Meghan's Paparazzi Ploy | Ep. 552
Episode Date: May 17, 2023Megyn Kelly begins the show by addressing the breaking news about a supposed "near catastrophic" paparazzi car chase in NYC involving Meghan Markle and Prince Harry, their history of exaggerating the ...danger they're in, and more. Then legendary comedian and actress Roseanne Barr joins to talk about how her hit TV show focused on a part of America often ignored, insider details of the way producers tried to control her and change the show, the betrayal by her co-stars and friends causing her TV show reboot cancelation, the awful way the show "killed off" her character, what she told co-star Sara Gilbert after Gilbert tried to publicly ruin her reputation, the toxicity of Hollywood, overcoming cancel culture, choosing adoption over abortion, growing up and the tragic circumstances early in her life, getting her start in comedy and her biggest break, and more. Plus Megyn reveals breaking news about who is expected to get Tucker Carlson's 8pm Fox News slot.More from Roseanne: http://www.roseanneworld.comFollow The Megyn Kelly Show on all social platforms: YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/MegynKellyTwitter: http://Twitter.com/MegynKellyShowInstagram: http://Instagram.com/MegynKellyShowFacebook: http://Facebook.com/MegynKellyShow Find out more information at: https://www.devilmaycaremedia.com/megynkellyshow
Transcript
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Welcome to The Megyn Kelly Show, your home for open, honest, and provocative conversations.
Hey everyone, I'm Megyn Kelly. Welcome to The Megyn Kelly Show. We have a great program for
you today with legendary comedian Roseanne Barr joining me. I've never met Roseanne.
I'm so excited to actually have her on. I've never interviewed her.
You know that this is a person who shattered stereotypes of motherhood and femininity and
was the voice of America's working class for years on her hugely successful show.
We watched it religiously in my family, and I'm a huge fan. We're going to dive into her life,
including some bumps along the way and what she's doing now.
Always funny, sometimes controversial and never boring.
Roseanne joins me in just a minute, but wanted to begin with this breaking news about the Duchess of Duplicity.
Meghan Markle and Prince Harry say that they were in a near catastrophic car chase involving paparazzi in New York City last night.
Near catastrophic. What does that mean?
I mean, near catastrophic is what we all have every time we look down to change the radio while we're driving our cars or engage in the stupidity of checking a text or our phones while we're driving.
That's near catastrophic. It is.
Anything could happen with anybody on the road around your car.
It was near catastrophic. It is. Anything could happen with anybody on the road around your car. It was near catastrophic. You see what they say. This is per CNN is they were involved in a near catastrophic
car chase involving paps last night, Tuesday, according to their spokesperson have yet to hear
from anyone in the NYPD on any of this. The couple were followed by a swarm of paparazzi,
but there was no car accident,
according to a law enforcement source. So a law enforcement source is saying no car accident at
all, but there were paparazzi there. Okay. It's a night in New York. Ask any person of interest or
who's a public person. It's happened to me. I've seen it happen to others. I was at a restaurant,
Nobu, one time when it was like you would have thought
that the actual Queen of England was there. And in fact, it turned out to be Kendall Jenner.
No, the other Jenner. The other one. Kylie Jenner. I guarantee she had more people following her
than these two did. The incident happened after Harry accompanied Meghan to the Women of Vision
Awards held at the city's
Ziegfeld Ballroom. They were traveling also with Meghan's mother, Doria Raglin. Spokesperson for
the couple said last night that Duke and Duchess of Sussex and Mrs. Raglin were involved in this
near-catastrophic chess at the hands of a ring, a ring of highly aggressive paparazzi. The relentless
pursuit, lasting over two hours hours resulted in multiple near collisions.
Again, no actual involving other drivers on the road, pedestrians and two NYPD officers who were apparently there to protect the couple.
By the way, they are probably from I'm told by law enforcement from the Intel division within the NYPD, which is sort of like the Secret Service and will sometimes go to protect VIPs in town for events like this. The statement said the couple understand that while being a public figure comes with a level
of interest from the public, it should never come at the cost of anyone's safety.
And now they want to discourage against dissemination of the images, given the ways in which they
were obtained, because they encourage a highly intrusive practice that is dangerous to all
involved.
Well, sorry, you two, but you're in America now.
And in America, the press has the right to photograph you when you're in a public place or on the streets or
leaving a place like the Ziegfeld Theater. That's the way it works here. And it's not pleasant.
I've been followed as well, but it's part of life in this country where we still have freedom of
the press. You don't like it? Go back home for the love of God. Please go back home, Harry.
Take your wife with you. I don't know how we got saddled with you to begin with.
So now they come out and say to TMZ that what happened was they got in their black car,
their black SUV, and then they switched cars. They got into a New York City taxi
to try to fool, I guess, the paps that they were still in the SUV. But no, in fact,
here's video that TMZ just posted of them in the taxi. And you can see the paparazzi lights
actually photographing the two. Okay, this is what happens when you are a star and you're
whizzing around New York. I mean, this is nothing extraordinary for a night in NYC.
What exactly happened that made it sound so harrowing for them?
We don't know.
This is what CNN reports.
Paparazzi on scooters and bikes zoomed down the sidewalk to keep up with them, according
to an unnamed source.
Well, I look forward to seeing the actual video of that.
Could have happened, but more than likely, that would be really tough to do in New York
City's Times Square, which is where they were leaving from. And I'll tell you one other thing
that doesn't check out about their story. There is no way of having a two-hour car chase in New
York City and Manhattan. There just isn't. There are too many stop signs. There are too many red
lights. There is too much foot traffic. There is too much actual traffic. And there's just,
it's impossible to be in a car chase in this borough for two hours. So exactly how did that happen? It would have happened out
of choice. The couple must've been willing participants to some extent because there
are hundreds of places to pull over and get to quote safety, which is what they claim they wanted.
Right? So I've got questions in particular because they have a history of lying, as you know, and even of exaggerating their alleged car chases.
Who could forget this scene from their Netflix special where they're they were urging one another to remember safety first safety first after one guy on a Vespa was following them allegedly.
Do we have that pap on the scooter again?
Yes, ma'am.
Oh, we do.
Same guy?
Same guy.
Oh, my God.
Watched him go into this park and...
Is he going to be with us?
Yes, sir.
He was just ahead.
There's a lot of people who think
they've got such a problem with paparazzi.
Yeah, there was the guys in the basement of the building, too,
as we were doing that walk we were recording, too, just so you're aware.
Back in my mom's day, it was physical harassment.
You know, cameras in your face, following you, chasing you.
She's following us.
Who?
Miss Pabst.
The worst-case scenario, so safety first.
Worst-case scenario, we're going from one garage to another.
Like, it's.
Safety first.
Okay.
Yes.
Right.
With the one guy in a Vespa.
So they have a history of exaggerating the danger they were allegedly in.
Remember when she tried to lead us to believe that her son Archie was basically in a fire when they were on that overseas tour?
And it turned out one heater in a room that Archie had been in, but was no longer, uh, started smoking. The child was nowhere
near it and was never in danger. Um, so she's got a history here. Let's not even talk about the Oprah
interview online. People are calling them the Jussie Smollett's of New York city. Other people
are saying, call Oprah, call Oprah right away. Talk about. Let me tell you about something.
Most of us who are public figures go through something like this multiple times.
And we don't run to our PR agents and have them release a statement playing the victim.
My safety was in danger.
It must stop.
It has to stop.
All right.
And I've never revealed this story before, but I will because of what we're
seeing here. It was right after I left NBC. I was very much in the news. The paparazzi were all over
me. Well, unfortunately I found out that I had a small basal cell carcinoma on my left temple.
It was a nothing, but as you know, if you've ever had one of these things, you have to get the
Mose procedure to get it off. And, um And I went into the dermatologist to get it off.
And then I was going to go cross town because they said, since it's your face, you should
have a plastic surgeon stitch it up.
Right.
And I did it.
Turned out beautifully.
You wouldn't even know.
By the way, get your skin care checks just to make sure these are things that are not
that big a deal.
But if you ignore them, they can become one.
So I went in to the guy's office who was doing the Mohs procedure.
I left and now I've got like a bandage on my left temple and I'm going over to the plastic
surgeon's office to have it stitched up.
And sure enough, there's a couple of paparazzi following me.
And I don't particularly want to be photographed with my left temple bleeding, going into a
plastic surgeon's because everybody's gonna be like, she's having plastic surgery. She's off the air. That wasn't it at all. I had a little skin cancer,
which I also didn't think was anybody's business. So I called ahead to the surgeon's office. I say,
I'm coming in. I'm being followed. You know, is there like a private entrance or what? There's
like, no, there's no private entrance. But, you know, we'll have a guard out there to help you
get in. Like, okay, fine. So I think out of, you know, good spirits, the guy, in an effort to, like, protect me from the paparazzi, but really just call more attention to me, comes outside holding this huge red umbrella, this big umbrella.
And it's sunny, and he's, like, shepherding me, and I'm like, oh, my God, this is, like, not what I wanted, but, you know, whatever.
Let's just get inside. And the paparazzi stops in the middle street. They run. The guy dives down. He's under my umbrella and he's taking photographs from under the umbrella. And I'm like, oh, my God, I've got this thing on the side of my face. She couldn't really see because of my hair. But I went in. Sure enough, they hit the papers. What's she doing? What's she doing? What's happening? They didn't put together that I was going in to see a plastic surgeon to stitch up this most procedure. The speculation that
hit the press later that day was that I was selling a book to random house. Apparently
random houses in the same building. Um, did I run to the papers and say, I've been endangered.
I have cancer. I could have pulled that bullshit. Most people are in the public eye. Take it like a man
or a woman. And we move on with our day because we understand they have a job to do. And dealing
with the press is part of our job, too. This woman hasn't seen a paparazzi she wants to avoid. Who
are we kidding? Just last week with her stupid little scarf as she was walking her dog, she
plays them just like Princess Diana did. And it can be a dangerous
game. But if this pair really wants to avoid encounters with the paparazzi that are unwanted,
then they should stop cultivating that relationship because it gets a little complicated.
By the way, not for nothing, but NBC News is now reporting that they have reached out to the NYPD and the NYPD is saying they don't know
anything about it. All right. This is what they actually told local NBC. Let me pull it up.
Stand by. I'm going through my texts via NBC for New York. The NYPD told NBC New York they have no
information about any incident last night involving Harry and Meghan, but have received lots of calls on it. NBC has not yet been able to verify that the incident
took place. This is sensationalism. That's what's happening here from a couple that needs attention,
a couple that complains at every turn about their alleged security problems. They have
$100 million plus, but apparently they're not able to
protect themselves. Do you think the paparazzi are after them any more than they're after
Tom Brady or Beyonce? You know what they do? They pay for security. That's what they do.
They don't run around complaining. Taylor Swift, every time... Taylor Swift's house has been broken
into in Manhattan numerous times by freaky stalkers. She doesn't run around
playing the victim, releasing statements about hope. What was me? Oh, it was near catastrophic.
I could have been in there. No, it's part of becoming someone who's in the public eye.
Grow up and stop lying to us because there isn't a car chase in Manhattan ever that's taken two
hours through Times Square. That reminds me of the meet the parents scene where they were doing a car chase in Manhattan ever that's taken two hours through Times Square. That reminds me
of the meet the parents scene where they were doing a car race, which is akin to, I think,
to this car chase. This is how it would go if you had a car chase in Manhattan. Jesus, fucker. No!
No, no, no, no!
Help me!
Help me!
No!
No, no, no, no, no!
It's not the armor, Brian!
Come on, Greg!
You get the feel.
That's how it would go.
You couldn't pick up enough speed.
Were they going to the Hamptons?
Was it an emergency car race to the Hamptons?
Because that's the only place that takes two hours on a Tuesday night.
Right?
They're exaggerating because they like being in the public eye. And let's face it.
He's been trying to make her into Diana from the moment they started
dating.
Remember early on, she had like a couple of paps following her and he released the statement
like, I'm not going to allow what to happen to her, what happened to my mother.
That's not what's happening.
Welcome to being a public figure.
Grow up.
By the way, if the paparazzi were really doing this up on the sidewalks for two hours,
endangering people, these NYPD guys would have arrested them. This would not have gone on for
two hours. So I will wait to hear from the NYPD. I am very open-minded to a different story,
but what they've put out right now stinks to high heaven, just like everything this pair puts out
into the public eye. All right, let's get on to more fun and interesting
matters. And that is the one and only Roseanne Barr joins me now. Roseanne, I'm so happy to
have you here. Thank you for coming on. Thanks for having me. I'm excited to talk with you.
Okay. So now can I ask you, are you in Texas? I heard you, you live in Texas now and Hawaii.
Yeah. Those are good choices.
I go back and forth. Those are good life choices. But now I didn't realize when preparing for this
interview that you grew up in Salt Lake City, Utah. I felt like I knew everything about you.
I don't know how I missed that. So you grew up a Jewish girl in Salt Lake City, Utah. Yeah, I say we were Jewish in Mormon, Utah.
We stuck out.
My family stuck out like a sore thumb there because we only had the one mother.
So that.
So what describe your family situation for me?
I know you have, I think, a brother and sister.
Was it a good upbringing?
Was like a happy childhood?
I had two sisters and one brother.
And I still have one sister and one brother. I lost my youngest sister last year. It was very sad. My mother is still alive. My dad is gone. He passed on. And it was a crazy family, a really kind of just out there family. We weren't
like other families. And it was good for me because I wrote a lot of that into my comedy
and my show. We were different culturally and well, just about in every other way. But, you know, I was a stranger in a strange land kind of thing.
And plus I was, you know, very dark and fat and short and everybody was tall and gorgeous
and blonde.
So there was that too.
And then when you were pretty young, catastrophe hit where you were hit by a car.
How old were you when that happened?
I was 16.
I got hit by a car on my way to school.
But of course, that wasn't the first catastrophe in my life.
That was like about the 75th.
But yeah, I was run over.
The car threw me up in the air. I didn't even see it coming. I was just crossing the street. And it threw me up in the air. And when I landed, my head came down on the hood ornament. And then she dragged me under her tires for about 30 feet before she knew she had hit me because the sun blinded her. So my legs were like hamburger meat and I was in, you know, unconscious and in a coma for a few days and semi-conscious for a couple weeks.
Had a brain concussion and a skull concussion and I had to have all these skin grafts on my legs.
My God. I mean, that is-
And that like really, like a lot of people who have really bad head injuries, it did change my
life. And I went through a lot of trauma trying to heal from it. For about 10 years, I was in a
lot of trauma because of head injury. That's why I feel sorry for these football players
and guys that play sports and get hit in the head a lot,
boxers and stuff,
because it really does do damage to your life.
It's sort of a weird question,
but do you feel like you would have had the career you've had
if that had not happened to you?
Was there something important about that in the person you've had, if that had not happened to you, was there some something
important about that in the person you would become?
Well, yeah, because I, well, you know, it changes you. But after that, I got suddenly really,
you know, a lot of people who go through that kind of trauma, they, they either become really
introspective, or they start doing
things that are uncharacteristic. And that's what I did. And I started doing like kind of crazy
things that I hadn't done before. I became a full blown hippie and I'd been pretty conservative
till then. So I kind of changed between night and day, you know, and I started doing full blown hippie things like things that I would just go crazy if my kids did. Like I
hitchhike cross country and just crazy, crazy, stupid things to put myself at risk. And I never
feared anything. I had no fear for anything. And now I look back and shudder
because I'm like, why didn't you have, what happened to your instinct of self-protection?
But that kind of was gone. And I kept putting myself in dangerous places all the time. But
I don't know, I just got really perilous and fearless. And so when I was 28 and I stepped on stage for the first time as a comic,
which I always wanted to be, it kind of came in handy to remember being fearless and
brazen. And it helped me with that. Yeah, definitely.
Were you always funny? I was always funny because in my family, my dad was hilarious.
He wanted to be a stand-up comic.
And everybody was funny.
And that's how you stayed out of trouble.
If I could make my dad laugh, he wouldn't hit me.
So that I learned very, very early because I was always in trouble.
And if I could make the teachers laugh or the kids at
school, I would be easily forgiven for all the infractions I did every hour. I never was a
well-behaved girl. I didn't understand anything about how the world works, which is kind of why
I sort of identify with Harry because I look at him, Prince Harry. And I think, but that guy never lived in the real world for one day in his life.
And then he marries this woman and she tries to get him to live in the regular world.
And he's so not equipped for it.
It's I kind of feel sorry for him.
He's like that movie being there.
Remember that movie being there with that great comic that I can't remember, Peter Sellers. And he's just lost in
the world. And I feel sorry for Harry. And that must have been really traumatic for him to know
that that's how his mother died, being chased by paparazzi. And he talks about having PTSD,
so that must have been really traumatic for him to relive that.
And I don't think that she has, she doesn't seem to think of him too much.
But I'm really on this thing where I, you know, I have two grown sons.
And so, you know, I had to see the women they date and all that stuff.
And it really changed my view of women.
And so now I'm really protective of guys and the women they get with.
I don't know.
I used to be the other way.
But with grown sons, you change a little.
You have sons, right?
I know exactly what you mean.
Yeah, I've got two.
And right now, I feel like there'll never be anybody good enough for them.
No one will ever measure up. And you're, you're right. I have to say my
son, my older son, he's got a, uh, uh, wife and they have a baby and I am so happy with her.
I'm telling you what, I'm so happy with her. You know, after I forced my son to divorce his first
wife, I had to do a lot of work to get that going.
But then I took him to Jerusalem and I said, you better get over to the wall and you better say a prayer that you get a good, you know, one that gets along with me.
Get over there and say your prayer right now.
So I forced him to go over there and he came back from the wall and I said, did you say your prayer?
And he goes, yeah, I prayed that the Broncos would win the Super Bowl there.
And I'm like, even God can't make that happen.
But anyway, no, they did not win.
But I said, did you do what I told you and ask for the right woman to come into your life?
He goes, yes, I did.
Well, we got home.
It must not have been more than nine months.
Here she comes from Texas, a Jewish girl from Texas. Very nice, very nice family.
Thrilled. My granddaughter looks exactly like me, acts exactly like me. It's like a gift from God.
My son says, what kind of karma is it when you're raising your own mother? And I'm like, oh, you so deserve that.
She's so fun.
You're so lucky.
It is hard.
I think, you know, my guys are still little.
They don't date yet.
But I know I will disapprove of most of the girls they bring home.
And I know I will hold my tongue because, you know, don't do that.
Don't ever.
What do you mean?
This is my advice. No, don't hold my tongue because you know don't do that don't ever what do you mean this is my advice
no don't hold your tongue don't ever hold your tongue when it comes to anyone in your family
because that's just sweeping your crap under the rug and end you end up with a huge rug in the
middle of your house with a lot of shit underneath it that you're living with when you should be
sweeping it out the door every day so you can have a clean house with no clutter. You never hold your tongue. Just
learn to say things nicely. Because I'd be worried, I think. You see what I mean? They'd
choose her like they'd say, you don't like her. I'd be worried that they'd say, you don't like her.
Bye. We're going to spend all our time together and I'll just exclude you from it and I won't
talk to you about it. While you can't say, I don't like you. Of course. I mean, nobody's going to go
for that. You have to say, well, what is it about her that bothers you? And then say like this,
you know, it it kind of bothers me when you do this. And I'd really like to resolve that
between us so that we can stay close. See, you got to bullshit like that.
I'm calling you in about three to four years, just as soon as my eldest starts dating.
We got to resume this.
You got to say, you got to say things nicely.
That's what I've learned.
That's the key.
Well, but don't hold your tongue.
Just say it nice.
So all of this, like it's starting to come into focus now, like how you wound up on the stage and how you were an instant hit and like given your past and the fearlessness and the need to be funny and just sort of your irreverence.
So but before we get to that, can we just spend a minute?
Because you were 18 and you found yourself pregnant and you decided to give the baby.
Well, I didn't find myself pregnant.
You went and got pregnant.
Yeah.
Well, I've had sex because I, I don't know.
I just really wanted to have sex because I thought I should,
because everyone else was doing it, you know?
And I just wanted to know what it was like and all that, like everybody else. And, well, I read these books, never read books.
Anyway, no, I'm kidding.
But I got it backwards because I'm dyslexic, I guess.
So I thought I was doing it on the safe days of my cycle.
Turns out I was doing it on the most fertile days.
So I had sex.
The first time I ever had sex, I got pregnant.
I did that real good.
So, yeah.
So the sex I had, I don't even remember it.
And, well, actually I do, but I'm trying not to. But anyway, I ended up having a baby and I gave her up for adoption.
And she turned 52 yesterday. And when I and I'm very proud of her. She's a wonderful woman. And she has a wonderful son, Ari Rubin, who I'm very
proud of won the state championship in chess in Colorado. You know, he's only 16. He won the state championship in chess. That's how smart he
is. I'm very proud. Nice husband, very nice from Russia. Anyway, so I forget what I'm talking about.
What am I talking about? Oh, yeah, my daughter and she's 52. So I had her and I had to go to
the Salvation Home for Salvation Army Home for unwed mothers, where I had her and then I had to go to the Salvation Army Home for Unwed Mothers, where I had her.
And then I had to give her up for adoption, which was very hard.
And when she was born, she had one ear that was kind of misshapen.
It was folded over like my mom's ear.
And I thought, oh, God made her ear like that. So I'll be able to find
her when she's 18. And I always said, and I told her when I got to keep her for two days.
And I told her, I'll see you again when you're 18. And I'll recognize you
from your ear. And so that's why I kept my name Roseanne Barr,
because in my mind I was like, I'm going to be famous
and I'm going to keep my name Roseanne Barr
because it's on her birth certificate
and she'll be able to find me easier.
So cut to, she's 17 and a half years old
and I'm famous.
And she gets a phone call from the National Enquirer, by the way, and
they say, your mother is trying to, well, that's a long story, but anyway, she gets
the phone call.
Your mother is a famous star in Hollywood and she wants to meet you because, see, they came to me and they said, we found your daughter.
We paid off somebody in Colorado Records like they just did with Rihanna and Rocky to get their kid's name.
But anyway, RZA, which is cool.
But anyway, I was going to say Prince Harry and them, they ought to do what Rihanna and Rocky do.
The paparazzi hold parking spaces for those guys.
You've got to get the right security and they'll be on your side, which I found out because I used to always be attacked by paparazzi too.
Anyway, so they come to me.
Every public figure's been through it.
We found your daughter.
Every public figure's been through it.
They act like they're the only two to ever have to deal with this.
Well, I think that he's probably been protected his whole life you know so he doesn't know what's going on to get in a cab oh my god anyway so they say uh you know and so they
call her and she she said she always knew that her mom would be famous. She knew that since she was little. And she looks
just like Goldie Hawn. So she thought it was Goldie Hawn. And she got all excited because
she's a singer too. And she thought, well, either her or Bette Midler, I sort of look like them,
she thought. And they said, it's Roseanne Barr. And she went, I didn't even know she was a Jew
because she was adopted through Jewish Family and Children's Services.
She goes, huh, Roseanne Barr, I didn't even know she was a Jew, which is hilarious.
But then she said she looked down at the coffee table and I was on the cover of the Enquirer that sat there when she got the call.
And she looked down at the Enquirer and went, oh, my God, because there is this, you know, fat girl on there.
And, you know, she was very Texas, beautiful.
She used a whole can of hairspray to get her hair a foot high every day.
So she's looking down and she said all of a sudden it started getting real clear to her that she did look like that.
And for me, it was like, you know, I always trust in my life, I've always trusted God. And I
knew that I got that feeling that I would see her and that I felt that feeling was from my prayers
being answered my whole life. And so I wasn't even that surprised. Well, so they set up the meeting
and her and her adoptive mom, who's just her other mom, I say, you know, she's, we're not going to say biological or adoptive.
She has two moms who love her.
And so her and her mom flew to L.A. and we met in a hotel.
And I ran, me and my sister, we ran through the doors of this hotel and I turned left into the cafeteria and she saw me
and we were just on each other like we just knew each other for all those years. And so the body
guards grabbed us because we couldn't let each other go. And they shoved us in the elevator. We went up to
the 16th floor and we just, you know, we remembered everything that we had gone through for 17 years
apart is how I can say it. She's been in my life since then. And she lived with me for a while. And
then she moved on to start her life when she was about 26. She's done real well
for herself. She runs a wonderful nonprofit organization called Billion Acts of Peace.
She's a wonderful person. And I'm so glad that we reconnected.
A lot of young girls, 18 years old, would have made a different decision,
would have chosen an abortion instead of to carry the baby to term and give it up, which you know is going to be
emotionally tough for you. How did you think about that at the time? I knew it was going to be tough
because I thought, you know, I'm never going to even know if she's alive or if she did get good
parents. But I would always keep tabs on that jewish and family children's services there
in denver i always like to spy on people consider not not going through with the pregnancy um
now i lived in utah and uh that that wasn't a possibility but even if it had been, that's not for me. I'm not, you know, that's not for me.
I have five kids.
And I said, one of my jokes is, hey, I should have stayed a Democrat because pretty soon they're going to make abortion legal up to the time they're 60.
And I should have hung in there.
Uh-huh.
Well, I see.
Then you could kill your adult kids, too.
Ha ha ha.
My kids are like, you know, my four older kids are from 42 to 52.
And sometimes I'd, you know, really like to take them to task.
And my youngest is 28.
But no, I'm glad I had them all. And I think we're way past the point where abortion should be anything that anybody thinks of,
because we have the technology to prevent pregnancies. And it's just barbaric that we
haven't come farther than that. And it really makes me mad when they say women have the right to choose.
And then the choice they're talking about is that something so barbaric.
And yesterday when, you know, I say, you know, why don't they just clip little boys when they're born, you know, give them a vasectomy at birth that can be reversed when they grow up and get a damn job.
You know what I mean?
They could do something easy like that. But instead, they choose this barbarity. And, you
know, there's a lot of reasons why they're all horrible. But we should be beyond that kind of a
remedy for we shouldn't even have unwanted pregnancies. Hello, that's ridiculous. We can fake like we sent a man to the moon and we can't
prevent pregnancy. I remember. Yeah, I know I have to fake laugh because there's nobody's getting my
jokes, but I'm used to that. They're getting they are. I remember there was a scene in Roseanne
where Jackie, you know, your sister in the sitcom was pregnant and you were in front of where Jackie, your sister in the sitcom, was pregnant. And you were in front of
the little sonogram machine looking at the sonogram with her. And I remember she was like,
oh, look, there's his little toes and there's his little spine. And she said, it looks like
he's wearing a hat on his head. And you said, I think we know what happened to the condom.
It was great.
There were so many great moments on that show.
I have a couple of clips that I'll go through with you, some of my favorites, because we watched it religiously, as I said.
And that'll be our next chapter after I squeeze in a quick break and then right back to the
one and only Roseanne Barr.
Stay with us.
She's with me for the full show.
So, Roseanne, you get through this challenge,
you're young, you're trying to figure out what's next in your life, and eventually you start doing a little comedy. You were a waitress and you decided to try your hand at
stand-up comedy, which is very scary for any civilian out there thinking about getting up
in front of a crowd and trying to make them laugh.
How did you first start out?
What was the first time like you stood up in front of people and actually told jokes with the intention of making people laugh?
Well, I guess I was 28 and I had been a cocktail waitress for about a year and I was always joking around with the customers there and uh you know it was
always in the back of my mind that I would either write comedy or perform it because
it just came easy to me and um uh I had written quite a bit of uh funny stories for magazines and
newspapers by that time anyway you know um but, these guys that I was waiting on, they said,
oh, you ought to go down to this comedy club in downtown Denver, Larimer Street.
And I went, what?
They said, yeah, there's a comedy club down there.
And so I went, oh, my God, I got to do it.
Because I had just seen this play with my sister about Gertrude Stein.
And there was this piece in the play, Pat Carroll was portraying Gertrude Stein, who's my favorite
writer. And it was about your 28th year. And it said, in every life, there is a 28th year.
And it isn't always when you're 28. But it's the year where you become yourself and you start to do what you
really want to do. It moved me a lot. And I was 28. And so I went to the club the next week,
I got my husband, Bill. And, you know, he was funny and a writer too, had written a lot of
funny things for different magazines like me. We were both writers.
And I said, let's go down because, you know, I want to see what it's like.
So we went down to the club and I watched the comics.
And, you know, arrogantly, I thought, oh, hell, I'm so much funnier than any of them.
And I said, come on, Bill, we're funnier.
Let's go write the material.
We thought we were going to do great.
And then it took a year
to write five minutes we thought it was going to be really really easy look how cute you are here
you are adorable in this picture so you're 28 years old let me see that again 28 years old
yeah and bill's 29 or 30 oh my god my God. We already had our three kids. We had like a 17 year old,
you know? Yeah, I had that that time was my I had four children at that time that I'd given birth
to. You know, my oldest one is, you know, with her other parents. But yeah, so I was, you know,
during the daytime, I was raising my three kids at home.
And Bill was working at the post office.
And then I would start going out to clubs, to the comedy store.
I mean, the comedy shop.
I mean, the comedy works.
That's what they changed their name to.
In Denver, a couple nights a week, and Bill would take over at home.
And then me and Bill on the weekends would
sit and try to write jokes and that's how it all started I kept on going and the first night I went
up that was in 1980 first night I went up I killed I just killed and I was like yes I'm gonna get
Eddie Murphy money it's gonna be so easy second week came back, died a dog's death with the same material, you know.
But I think I got a little arrogant and I didn't deliver it right.
Whatever reason there was, you always have to look for the reason when you're a comic.
But anyway, so they got mad at me and they banned me from the club then on my second night.
Just because you bombed once? I was like, oh, hell, now what am I going to do? That's not cool. Oh, night. Just because you bombed once?
Now what am I going to do?
That's not cool. Just because you bombed
one time? Isn't that part of the process?
Yeah.
Some woman in the
audience complained about me. She said
my pants were too tight
and I was offending women.
So they got rid of me.
Okay. You were
the victim of cancel culture a few times.
Nothing's changed.
Right.
It's always some bitch.
Anyway.
Uh-huh.
Anyway, so then I had to figure out how I was going to get better.
And I started to perform all over Denver in unusual clubs that would let me perform. I went
to Unitarian churches. That was a big one. They're coffee houses full of lesbians and such. And of
course, they'd never laugh at anything. But I still tried to get them to laugh. And sometimes
I could. And then I'd go to biker bars. And then I could and then I'd go to biker bars and then I'd
be really rough language in the biker bars and you know you could get them to laugh I went to
black jazz clubs down there in the inner city and they were the best audience ever I've ever been in
front of still are and then I get real brave on account of that because it was a hip audience
that was very you know had was well read and that added a lot to me and then i started going to uh
punk bars and they would make me do my jokes in the mosh pit so i did that even with no microphone
i was in the in the mosh pit going,
Hey,
you guys,
you know,
screaming.
That's why I got such a loud voice from.
And then,
uh,
and then some rock and roll people let me start opening up for them.
Jazz people.
Let me start opening up for them.
And,
um,
I,
then people passing through town,
um,
bands like,
uh,
you know,
uh, Oh God, now I can't remember nobody's name, but Dave, the Dave Mason.
And, you know, they they'd hire me to open for them in Denver.
I know at some point somebody saw you and said, you got to come on The Tonight Show, which is the big break.
I mean, that was.
Oh, that was my bit.
That was after four years of that.
And then somebody comes.
Louie Anderson comes denver there and he
goes you gotta let mitzi shore see you and alan steven two comics that would headline in denver
and all the locals would open up for him they go you gotta let mitzi shore see you come to la mitzi
is gonna love you and you know in my mind it was like mitzi Shore was the god of comedy. So I came out to the Comedy Store in LA.
My first night on stage, after four years of perfecting it, well, really five years,
85, I came up to do my five minutes for Mitzi Shore.
And I killed.
And Mitzi said, go do 20 minutes in the big room.
And the waitress has said that had never happened before
where somebody went from showcase to main room in the same night. Well, that same night, George
Slaughter was there and he was casting for a show he was doing about women in comedy. That very same
night, he booked me to be one of the stars in his women of Comedy. I think they called it Girls of Comedy then.
And when I came back two weeks later,
after I went home to get my kids all sorted out
so I could come back to LA in two weeks
and stay for two weeks,
the night I came back to work for George Slaughter,
a guy came up to me.
So I'd been in LA approximately two nights by this time. A guy came up to me. So I've been in LA approximately two nights by
this time. A guy came up to me and he said, Roseanne, I'm with The Tonight Show and I want
to book you on Friday. And The Tonight Show at that time was like somebody coming up to a brand
new comic and saying, we're going to feature you on your own HBO special on Friday.
It was like the biggest thing that could ever happen.
And I went on Friday and my life changed.
I had been out of Denver for two days, really.
And my entire life changed.
That night on The Tonight Show, Julio Iglesias was a guest and he asked me to open for him on an 18th city tour, which I did. And then I got my TV show.
Yeah, then they found you. I love the stories about you sitting out there with Carson. And, you know, we picture that exchange with you being your normal funny self and him eating it up. And I know the truth was very different. You were very stiff and intimidated
by your circumstances the first time on his show. Yeah, he he waved me over from doing the stand up
to come and sit on the panel. And I was like, Oh, no, I'm getting the hell out of here. And so I
just ran off stage. And I got I ran into the car and I go, I got to go home.
I just got, you know, if I get really nervous,
I'll get all tongue tied and I'll stutter, you know,
and I thought I'm not prepared because I always want to be prepared.
I was so not prepared.
So then they booked me back for two weeks later. I came on again and they came to me and they go,
Johnny wants you to come and sit with him when
you're done. And I'm like, Oh, my God, I don't have no material to do on the panel. I'm not
going to be able to run out. I don't know what I'm going to do. And I was just panicked. But I
did good on the stand up part. And then I'm like, I got to go over there. So I go over there and he
tries to set me up for jokes. And all I can do I gotta go over there so I go over there and he's tries to
set me up for jokes and all I can do is just go thank you Mr. Carson thank you so much Mr. Carson
you you have changed my life and I love you so much Mr. Carson I'm like the most boring but then
I got it together for my third Carson and I relaxed and you know I thought I was going to start crying
and pee my pants there but anyway how old were you then I got it together how old were you then I I
I was uh 30 31 no 32 very very young woman this is very shortly after something like that doing
stand-up so that it really was a meteoric rise and then you were spotted by uh the
people who ultimately put together the rosanne show correct like it was on your tour with robinson
that you were spotted by somebody who makes sitcoms and this was of course just to remind
our younger audience at the time when you know there were very few options when it came to like
your nightly television so to get a show show, my God, it was incredibly competitive.
And your show, ultimately, I'll just jump to the, you know, the climax,
had 30 million people watching it a night.
There's nothing that compares in today's day and age.
Well, we actually had 38 million and sometimes 44 million a week to watch it.
And the thing that was amazing is there was only like three channels, though.
But that Bill Cosby show was number one.
And that was all the rage, you know, this kind of rich upper class family of professionals.
And so they didn't know how my show was going to go,
but I did,
I knew.
And,
uh,
that's why I wrote it,
you know,
because I thought there's gotta be a show about real human beings and real
people on TV.
I thought that when I was a girl and I used to watch TV and I'm like,
this is nothing like my family.
Where's the, you know, this is nothing real like any family I've ever seen.
So I used to have these fantasies as a girl.
If I'm, you know, when I grow up, I'm going to write a show and it's going to show real
stuff on it.
So anyways, that's what I grew up and did.
And my show became number one in unseated Cosby as I sort of knew it was going to do.
And I was grateful because my prayers got answered then too. It was nice.
You know, I only have a minute to break, but I understand that when you launched it,
instead of going to the pilot and seeing created by Roseanne Barr, you saw created by, I think,
Matt Harris. You saw a guy's name on there who was one of the writers, I guess.
Yeah.
What was it?
Matt?
Yeah.
Williams.
Matt Williams.
Which I have to say, like, it must have been absolutely infuriating to you
because we've all listened to how the show was truly birthed,
and it wasn't by Matt Williams.
No.
That's just the way it is, huh?
That's the way it is for women in Hollywood.
It hadn't changed.
It's gotten worse. And I thought I just couldn't. I couldn't believe it. I had about 15 nervous breakdowns over that one. But there's nothing I could do. I tried to sue everybody. But as usual,
there's not one lawyer in LA who will sue anybody with any power in TV, I found.
But you stood up for yourself, which is, I mean, that's saying something in and of itself,
because at this point you're young, you're new in the business. I'm sure you're thrilled you
have your own show. So it's pretty ballsy to even sue and threaten and complain, which you did. But
that ballsy, it doesn't begin to describe Roseanne Barr in all of her fullness.
Stand by, quick break. We'll pick it up right there and we'll get into the show right after this quick, quick commercial. Before we get back to Roseanne, just bring you this quick news
on a story that we've been covering quite a bit here on the MK show, and that is Fox News
may have some breaking news. Drudge Report is reporting right now that they have decided on what to do about their hemorrhaging 8 p.m. hour, formerly occupied by Tucker Carlson, that they will be moving Sean Hannity currently at nine into the eight o'clock slot and that they will then keep Jesse Waters in the primetime, which I believe means he'll move to either
nine or 10 as opposed to staying at seven. And that Greg Gutfeld will also head to prime time.
Greg Gutfeld is now an 11. It's not really considered prime. Prime is really eight,
nine and 10. So presumably they're talking about moving him. If that's true, one wonders what's
happening to Laura Ingram, who's currently at 10. They reached out to Fox, the folks at Mediaite, and they said, quote, no decisions been made on a new primetime lineup.
And there are multiple scenarios under consideration.
But I can tell you, having worked there, that Drudge always has the leaks on the lineup changes there.
He certainly had the one when I moved to primetime long before anybody else did.
And he's got impeccable sources inside the building.
So I'd be surprised if he were wrong. They need to do something. I will submit for the record,
this isn't it. This is not it. They need a voice like Tucker's. And even that's probably not going
to do it because the audience is very angry and they miss Tucker. But Hannity is not the answer
at eight. He's not the answer at eight. He hasn't been the answer at nine lately since Tucker left. We've been following the ratings. They're hemorrhaging at eight and nine
where currently is Sean right is right now. And just by way of numbers in that we now have it up
to four weeks, the four weeks prior to Tucker's departure, he was averaging a 3.3 million in the
overall. Now it's less than half. They're averaging 1.5 million.
So less than half than what Tucker got. He was averaging a 429,000 in the demo,
25 to 54 year olds. They're now pulling in 152,000. And that times Latin Hannity is not
much better. He's at 158,000 in the demo, down about half from 308,000. And his overall is down significantly to all double digit falls.
So, you know, the audience will have the last say on whether these are the solutions.
But right now they're still very, very angry at Fox News.
And Fox hasn't done much to assuage their concerns or make them feel better about firing
their top star who remains under contract, but silenced.
That is, of course, Tucker carlson so more on that as
we get it now back to rosanne barr now rosanne the show starts off and it's cooking with gasoline
it doesn't start off in the number one position but you got there how soon after launch third
episode ah third so what was it what was what was the magic of that show that made it such a hit
because it just showed regular people it showed a regular family of working class people and
you know that's who the audience is and that they they always forget that you know
but uh that's who the audience is and they wanted to see i thought they wanted to see themselves
not being put down, but
being lifted up.
And so that's what I tried to do.
One of my favorite episodes of the show, I just pulled a little clip because it's something
I remembered all these years.
It just would make you laugh out loud at talking about real people problems, but with a sense
of humor, not in a dark or sad way.
And it was the episode where DJ, your son on the show, got into the school spelling bee. And we
just had one of our little guys win his spelling bee at his school. So this is timely for my family
too. The funniest thing ever. Here it is, Sot 2. Go, Deej, you can do it, buddy. Be the word. Sound it out.
Jeez, it's just a spelling bee.
Maybe to you, pal, but it's all we've got.
Yes, sir!
Everybody!
Oh, please, please let it be a word he knows.
David Jacob, your word is foreclosure.
For the listening audience, Dan Conner puts his arm around Roseanne.
They sit back.
They know a kid's got it. Peter. Absolutely brilliant. Those moments are belly laughs that you brought to us for years. It's what made us all fall in love with you and John Goodman, you know, the Conner family. They became like members of our family. It must have been, to the outsider,
it seems like it would have been a very special time.
Do you remember it fondly or do you remember, you know,
the battles that must have also been going on behind the scenes?
Both.
I remember the performance on Friday that we taped in front of a live audience
being just the best and that it made the previous four days worth it and those
previous four days were a battle every minute every day with writers with producers um but i
had a great crew and they pulled me through so many things and uh just so many things and um i'm sure my uh my um my allegiance was to my crew
because my crew to me represented the people at home who who you know were my fans and the audience
and of course my real allegiance was to them because they're the ones who made the show and they're the ones who made me. So of course, my allegiance was not to any network people, but to them.
And still, what were the tensions? Like what, what, what kind of a hard time were they giving
you? We talked a little bit about Matt Williams and them trying to sort of steal credit is,
is, you know, from you, but what else, what were, what were some of the power battles?
Well, they deal, did steal credit. And I tried to fight that. I went to my agents. I went to the network
president. I went to lawyers. I went everywhere because I said, this is wrong. And then they said,
well, you waited 10 days. You didn't respond within 10 days, so you have no fight left.
That's what the Writers Guild told me. And at that time I was like,
how am I going to fight this? And once they won that battle,
then the next battle was, Oh,
now you have to say what we tell you to say,
even though I was the author and it was about my life and you know,
every character in it was about my life or someone in my life,
my own three children, my, my own husband, me.
And then they were going to start telling me what I was going to say.
And it was all sexist.
It was all backward sexism.
And I wasn't going to play it that way because I didn't come to TV to be a caricature. I came to be an anti-caricature of a woman, which was unheard
of, of course, except for just a couple exceptions of other women who I love and admire from
television. So I battled that, and they would keep the cameras on me, and I said,
I need it. My lawyer said, just say, I request a line change.
And so I said, I request a line change. And they said, no, you're not going to get it. Say the
line as written. That went on for eight hours. And, you know, they could, I guess they couldn't
come up with a new line. And then I'd say, well, do you want me to write the line? And they were
really horrified that I would write the joke because it would be funny, and that's one thing they hate is funny. And so then I just said, fine, I'm going to just do it. And then doesn't work for a Jewish girl from Utah, a poor working class Jewish girl from Utah. It doesn't work to try to break my back. So my sister, who was very strong too, she drew out a chessboard and she said, here's what you're going to do. Here's their king, here's their queen, this and that and the other. And you're going to take your guy and this and that and the other. And I went, yeah, I got a game plan, you know.
And so I hung a thing on my door.
This was after the first episode where I couldn't get created by credit
or even share created by credit in my creation.
I wrote a poster on my door and I said,
these are the people that will be fired when this show goes to number one.
And I put all their names down, including the network president and everybody that I didn't,
you know, that I felt had screwed me over. And when the show went to number one, they were all
gone, including that network president. So I just by sheer force of will. and, you know, I want to say having grown up in an apartment house with Holocaust survivors as a girl, I am not a person that can be broken.
I don't know why, but I'm not.
It must have been a little awkward when they came to visit you in your office and saw their names on a kill sheet.
Did anybody see it was on the back of your door with a big X over
this guy's face? Oh yeah, they all saw it.
They all saw it and they thought it was
funny.
And
everybody thought it was funny and I
too, like I thought it
was funny.
I'd be like, these are the people that are gone.
And they're like, oh, you are such a fun,
funny person and as
soon as it was number one i'm like i won't even have to remove them because they'll just get rid
of themselves and the first the first thing i did was ban the producers from the set and uh you know
because i didn't want anybody there who was just there to give me grief and you know i wanted to
be creative and funny i wanted to have fun I wanted to write lines for the other characters. I wanted to, you know,
create art for television for my viewers that I love. And they just hate that, you know, they hate,
they really hate all talent, because they've done their best to squash it and ruin it.
And, but they particularly hate a woman who has it.
So I got a double dose.
But at the end of the third season, when I got rid of Matt Williams,
they told me, well, he will be gone, but you'll have to wait this many days.
So I counted those down and, you know, that was a fight.
But when I got rid of him and I got my writers
and I hired a lot of comics and people who had never had a job before as writers, gave a lot of writers their first job who went on to, you know, sitcom history.
Jed Apatow.
But by the end of the third, yeah, Jed Apatow, Joss Whedon, Chuck Lorre, tons of them.
I can't remember a million
other names.
But at the end of the third or fourth season,
I was very, very happy because I
had helped to unionize the crew.
And I feel like that's
my greatest accomplishment, that
they would get benefits,
not just... They really just wanted you to shut up
and act, and just be the actress
in the lead role, as opposed to the creator, the joke writer, all the things that made you a star who they solicited in the first place. And yet, you need to shut up now. And like they wrote Roseanne Connor as if she just sat there.
That's how they know my character.
I was like, oh, Christ.
Right.
That doesn't ring true.
I mean, the cast was absolutely brilliant.
And one of my favorites and everyone's favorites was Laurie Metcalf, the woman who played your sister, Jackie, who I don't know if she had a comedy background or what.
But this woman would
make you laugh out loud every episode. And it's a tough crew to hang with. You're with Roseanne
Barr, you're with John Goodman. I mean, I'd hate to have to be funny in your presence. It would be
intimidating and hard, but she bore the burden well. In another one of my favorite scenes as a
mother myself of three, I thought back on this many times.
You know, Laurie was on Saturday Night Live for a little bit before she came on my show.
Well, that makes sense.
She's a very funny, gifted, comedic actor.
That makes sense because you can tell how funny she is.
But here's the clip.
The whole thing is funny, but the first line I have quoted a million times during the three of my pregnancies,
and I offer it now to the other women out there wondering the same thing that jackie was wondering while very pregnant the actual actress was pregnant i think in this uh
exchange in sod 11 be the old child inside of me look at me
it's huge yeah but you have a very pretty face.
Eww! Look at that! What is that? What's that? How come it's like that?
How? Roseanne, how is this gonna come out of this?
Relax, Jackie. These have been coming out of those for millions and millions of years.
Muscle stretch.
Bones break.
I'm sick of being pregnant.
Well, maybe it's like a turkey, you know, when this comes out.
Pressing the belly button.
How is this going to come out through this?
Such a good question.
Well, we all find out, don't we?
Absolutely.
But what about Laurie Metcalf?
Did you have a good relationship with her then?
And do you still?
I have no relationship with her.
But we had a great relationship for those 10 years that we worked together.
We were very good friends. Was she one of the ones who abandoned you after the whole cancellation controversy?
Yeah, that was just it.
I'm so sad to hear that,
Roseanne. I kind of hoped she was one of the
good guys.
You know
Hollywood.
You know
how it is.
Yeah, of course, and then you figure out who your real friends are.
Yeah, you figure out you got none friends are. So that's the.
Yeah, you figure out you got none.
You ain't got no friends in Hollywood.
Well, if they're going to make if they're going to make one dime more to slice your throat, you know, you ain't got no friends.
Well, let's talk about it.
My only friends in Hollywood died.
That's what's horrible.
Well, wait, because I want to get into I thought
John Goodman was good, but you'll tell me but you so that Roseanne ended after nine years,
it was number one for most of them. Then you did a couple of other things. And then the Roseanne
reboot comes back on as we're seeing now with a lot of very popular shows. This one's called
well, now it's called the Connors. But you came back and you were the star of it. And then you
got in trouble, as everyone remembers, for some tweets that you sent out about Valerie Jarrett
one night where you the next morning said you'd been on Ambien and you were apologetic. You were
sorry, but I mean like that, they canceled the show. And what was extraordinary in that moment, and believe me, I understand this
personally now on some level, is how your cast, your, quote, family, came out person by person
and attacked you. In particular, the one I remember is Sarah Gilbert, who seemed to really
want to hurt you. She saw you were down and struggling.
And instead of lifting you up or at least saying nothing or saying,
I love her, I'm out of respect for all she's done for me.
I'm going to sit this one out, which was the bare minute.
She stuck the knife in and she twisted it.
So repeatedly, she repeatedly twisted it. She it was her tweet that canceled the show.
And she wrote
it's sad when one cast
member
that's what she called me
after she begged me to come back
saying I've got your back this time. I won't
let anyone at you. I won't let anyone
at you. I won't let anyone hurt you. I'm going to protect you. I know, you know, you have mental
health problems, but I'm going to be there. I'm going to stand in the way. This all the crap she
told me, you know. And then she tweeted, it's sad when one cast member,
something about racist, blah, blah.
And I was floored.
I was just floored.
And, you know,
she ends up owning my work
and Tom Warner becomes her partner in owning my
work. And it's just so,
but now and every day in Hollywood,
I can't even complain about it anymore.
Tom Warner tried to fire me the second week or third week of the original
show, because he thought, you know,
me running around trying to get
my creative by credit wasn't painting his ass and so they tried to replace me at that time
fired me off my own show um but at that time they went to john goodman laurie metcalf and asked him
if they would do the show without me and they said no so they couldn't they didn't dare fire me then
but they would have had they done what
they did the second time around i wouldn't have ever had a show i would have been fired off that
too if they would have acted the same as they did the second time but um because they didn't act
that way is why the show went on so cut to me coming back in the reboot getting 28 million viewers who you know
disney didn't care about them at all they canceled the show uh before even one sponsor pulled out
but the really weird thing is uh saying about tom warner he kind of got what he was always after, and I didn't know it, you know what I mean?
I kind of thought that I had caused a lot of trouble and that the second time around I was going to be better, nicer, bigger.
I never thought, hey, it's not you.
You're not the problem. You're not the problem.
You never were the problem.
I always tend to blame myself being a comic or whatever it is.
But then I went to myself, why did you ever go back with people who tried to hurt you so bad in the beginning?
And I was like, I tried to make it right.
And then I was like, why would you try to make it right with people? I have no intention of making anything right. They wanted to continue to hurt you. And I never, it never even occurred to me that that was a possibility. talking about the show and I said you know it's great how many people think of me as their mom
and tell me that every day wherever I go and out of nowhere he turned to me and he goes I hated my
mother and a chill went up my spine and I thought this is a bad bad portend because you know we were i don't know but uh
then later i see that the guy who canceled my show is uh you know at tom warner's wedding
so they were all you know they i i don't even know why they wanted me to come back if it wasn't
just to set me up and steal steal my show from me i i don't know why
um but that was the thanks i got for um bringing 28 million viewers per week while it went down to
17 making everybody rich i mean they all got rich to me and and that's the thing what really made
me mad is that huh i was yeah you made all these what really made me mad is that... She got rich and famous. Huh? Yeah. What really made me mad
is that they denied me the
ability to go on any of
their other shows to
apologize to the audience for
offending people
because like I say, well, I thought Valerie Jarrett
was, I say,
I racially misgendered someone
I assumed to be white.
That was, you know, when I told the network, I thought she was white.
I meant it as a political tweet and not as a racial tweet.
What's wrong with you?
And I said, let me explain that.
Let me just tell the audience what the tweet said, because they may be confused.
It was a late night tweet in which you wrote, it was a picture of Valerie Jarrett.
Well, it was a picture.
A picture came across and it was like, you know,
one in the morning and I don't see so good, but she looked exactly like this character from a,
you know, a science fiction movie. And I captioned it. You captioned it Muslim Brotherhood and Planet
of the Apes had a baby equals V, Valerie Jarrett. You, you apologize.
And I actually thought your defense was interesting where you said,
I thought she was white.
I remember you tweeting.
I'm not stupid.
I wouldn't refer to a black person as the product of an ape.
I'm not so, you know, back.
Well, the planet of the apes.
I thought she was white.
Here's where everybody, they just.
Liberals are so racist that when they hear just the word ape, they automatically think of a black person.
But in reality, what it was about was about what was happening in Iran because of Valerie Jarrett's Iran deal, which is now happening in our country. It was about a militarized police
force, just like in that movie I referenced. That is about a militarized police force,
which goes after human beings, doesn't even assume they have the right to read or speak,
and mass arrests them when they do. That was why I made reference to that movie.
And you can see that my tweet was kind of prescient because that's exactly what's going on in our country right now or soon to be.
And, you know, the Muslim Brotherhood that Valerie Jarrett is a part of, and so is Obama, are the ones who militarized our police force.
That happened under Obama's watch.
And they did it in Egypt, and then they did it in Iran,
and now they're doing it here.
They do the same thing everywhere.
And, you know, I'm so glad that things are starting to come to light
about what was done to our country under that administration
and continues under the Biden administration.
But people are not well-read enough to understand that tweet. And so they just go,
ape equals black person because they are so completely racist. And in my act, I say,
why didn't they let me go on The View to explain myself? Joy Behar has done blackface and they have no problem with
that. Why didn't they let me go on Jimmy Kimmel? He's done blackface and they have no problem with
that. Why am I not allowed to go on there and explain to people that that was not a racial tweet
in any way? It was a political tweet about militarized police forces that are all over this country.
Whether people want to see it or not, that is the truth.
Let me ask you about that.
I should say there is zero evidence that Valerie Jarrett's part of the Muslim Brotherhood,
never mind Barack Obama, who's not.
But I understand you're trying to make a political criticism.
Well, they're very tight.
I'm sorry.
They're very tight with people who are.
You can't deny that.
So but what I want to ask you is why? Because I understand this, too, where they you're wrapped up in a controversy and you want to speak out about it.
This didn't happen to me on my departure from NBC, but this happened to me when I got ripped for, quote, platforming Alex Jones.
And I desperately wanted to just go out and say, this is what journalists do. Well, you know, Diane Sawyer interviewed Charles Manson. She interviewed the head of the KKK. Like we,
as journalists interview controversial people and we talk to them and we ask them tough questions
and we let the audience decide. They wouldn't let me go out and talk about it. It was very
frustrating. And I'm sure you can take your situation and times it by a thousand. So what
was the, well, they totally silenced me.
They deplatformed and silenced me so that I couldn't even explain my tweet or apologize
to black people to say, I've lived my whole life as a civil rights activist.
I fought to get my crew integrated.
I never would be on a show unless it had integrated crew.
I fought to get black writers on every show I've done,
which was really hard to do at Disney, believe it or not.
And, you know, the fact that they would call me a racist really torques me off,
and I reject it.
I don't take any of their labels. They're all good,
completely fake. And they're fake. And, you know, if you would look at the Obama guest list of how
many times people from Muslim Brotherhood visited the White House, just Google it.
Well, I mean, that's a whole other story. But I think...
But in my defense, that's what I was speaking about to journalists in Iran when I tweeted that.
And it was taken out of context in a three-month-long conversation about the rights of
women, and particularly women business owners, middle-class women business owners being dismantled by the Iran deal that
America made over there and also did during the Egyptian spring. Let me ask you a question because
you got canceled about five months before I got canceled and it's been about five years. I think
I was the test case. They could take me down so easily then I was like, watch, everybody,
nobody defended me either. And I said, watch, they're going to take everybody out now. Everybody. They're going to take all the comics and then they're going to take all the journalists It was all one big thing that they dreamed up. Well, you'd come out as a Trump supporter. I mean, the reboot had you and your character
as a Trump supporter and Jackie, played by Laurie, was a Hillary.
Yeah. I didn't think that I should play a Trump supporter on the show because in real life I
wasn't. I thought that was too on the head. So I really wanted John Goodman to be the Trump
supporter, but he wouldn't. Nobody else would.
So, you know, I wanted those two.
I wanted those two opinions on the show.
So I had to do it.
And they targeted me from the beginning of that show of the reboot.
They targeted me because I like Trump because I didn't love Hillary.
They hate when you don't love Hillary.
But isn't it so great, the Durham report that tells us all about,
you know, everything that Hillary did to Trump and to people who like him,
including me, that whole cabal or whatever you want to call it.
They don't want this opinion that I'm speaking and that you're speaking.
They don't want any opinion that I'm speaking and that you're speaking. They don't want any dissent at all.
No, you're not wrong.
The betrayal, though, to me seems like it still looms large for you.
I can feel your frustration and totally understand it.
I don't feel that way.
I honestly feel I was talking to James O'Keefe.
You know who he is?
Yeah, yeah.
He's on the program.
And it's kind of the same thing happened to him, a business he built.
But I said, well, here's how I feel right now looking back.
I'm like, well, God took me out of there.
He took me out of there for my own good.
And I don't look back.
I don't, it doesn't loom large for me.
It's just who they are and what it is.
And I tell you, I feel in my soul, I'll be around a lot longer than Hollywood.
I can't, I mean, like, it around a lot longer than Hollywood. I can't.
I mean, it's one thing to fire you.
It's another to take your intellectual property, keep it rolling.
It's still on TV.
You have to watch.
How about that?
And then kill me off in a drug overdose, which is really, really horrific because Glenn Quinn,
who was on our show, actually died of an opioid overdose in real life.
And to write that off and to have me do it, to insult his family that way, it just makes me sick.
And to have done that to somebody who a large amount of working class people and other people
too, all over the world, looked at as a mother figure who always
solved every problem
with love and understanding
and humor to do her dirty
like that. But as
I always say, well, Disney loves killing
the mother from Bambi to me. They do.
They love it. They love it. It's a joke
in my family. Even my kids are like, yeah, the mother
dies. Of course, it's Disney, so the mother dies.
Let me just show the audience that clip because we actually have that moment when the connors came
back sans rose oh do we have to i've never even seen that show oh no then no we don't have to
forget it forget it no let's not run it there's zero desire to retraumatize anything they give
me the creeps okay i feel like a cold chill up my spine knowing what they did and how many things i did to help
them in their lives but i know the kids especially the kids especially they came they were they were
little you were like a mother figure to them and then the backstabbing john goodman i thought i've
got to ask you this because i know he came out in variety right after it happened or not long and said I was surprised no three months after okay three months he said something three months after I was fired
he said I I was surprised I was I was surprised and that's probably all I should say about that
I know for a fact she's not a racist so you felt it should have been more, I guess. Well, it was three months later. I mean,
he made his deal. They all split my salary between them. So it doesn't mean anything that he said
that. I mean, it might help him feel better about himself, but I just can't believe it for really. I mean, I told lies for those people.
You know what I mean? When you lie for people and then that's how they do you, it's just like,
oh, well, walk away. You just have to walk away. It's like a sickness. And I don't,
I'm not going to be like that in my life. I have never in my life purposely stepped on anybody or taken anything from anybody
or hurt them on purpose when I had my wits about me.
I believe in God, and I could never look in the mirror had I done any of that.
And at times, the mistakes I've made or cruel things I've said,
I've apologized for and tried to make right.
I just don't go on like it meant nothing, like, you know, years of my life,
being intimate friends with someone meant nothing when I got a dime extra.
I can't believe it. But that's
Hollywood. And it is an infection. Sometimes I say, it's an infection. You can't heal from it.
No, it's a disgusting, dirty industry. When you say you told lies for these people,
what do you mean? I told lies for them to protect them, to help them.
The actors? The cast? I told lies for them to protect them, to help them.
The actors? The cast?
Yeah, the actors.
When I saw they had problems, I was like,
I'll help you get help, and I'll cover for you.
And I did.
I'm not like them.
When I give my heart and my love and my loyalty to someone,
it ain't fake. I can't be a fake. If I was going around being a fake, I'd be so mentally ill.
I couldn't remember what I said the day before or who I lied to. I have to tell the truth or I get mentally ill. I can't bullshit people because I'll get mentally ill. I won't remember the bullshit lie I told.
And I'll have to rack my brain. You chose the wrong industry. You chose the wrong industry
that you can't work like that. I didn't. I chose to make people laugh and feel happy
and not be afraid to look at themselves closely.
And, you know, I just went back to stand up.
I'm doing that again.
And I'm going to, you know, do a podcast.
And I'm more than thrilled to be talking about real life with people who've actually
gone through hell themselves and gotten over it.
That's what people need to hear now is like, how are we going to cope with what they're doing to us, what they've done to us, what they're doing to our country,
what they're doing to these people who are coming here, what they're doing to the world?
How are, what are we going to do? How are we going to handle it? How are we going to breathe
life back into people so they can get their, you know, brains back and their souls and their
hearts? How can we heal all the horror in the
world? We've got to do it. I really relate to what you said about it separated you from them,
and that was a good thing. Because I don't like cancel culture, but I also see the silver lining
of it, which is generally it separates someone from a company they didn't belong at to begin with.
These were not your friends, not your allies. They were fake friends and allies and supporters
who wanted you to make money for them. That was it. And once you were politically problematic,
they turned their backs on you. I can relate to that. And I do think ultimately you're better off
Well, I think I'm better off too, but like I was going to say, Sarah Gilbert was on that show, the talk,
and it wasn't enough that she stabbed me in the back and did what she did to me there. But
then she would go on her talk show every day and talk about how shocked she was at my racism on top
of it. And, um, it was every day. And, and you know i had done that show when she needed a
guest in um sweeps i went on there every time she asked me in sweeps and um uh i called her up
and uh i said just like this you better shut your blanking mouth about me. I'm telling you, you better shut
your effing mouth. And then she did. But my voice can be very scary. And my son went on,
he made a video and he said, if only my mom had molested little children,
they would have took her back on, on, uh, you know, like they took back James Gunn who had
a thousand tweets about molesting children. They took him back at Disney. And, uh, and, uh,
let's not, let's not forget it. My son said to Sarah. They all went to dinner after he'd already copped his plea for taking advantage of minors as alleged prostitutes, which is not a thing.
You cannot be a minor in a prostitute.
You are the victim of a sex trafficking operation or a bad man.
You're a slave.
They all lined up.
The news people and the celebrities lined up, not to mention the royalty, Prince Andrew, to get back into his house for his dinner party.
I know. And my son said to Sarah Gilbert, if my mother is a racist, then you shouldn't be making
money on a racist work.
Yeah, it's a good point.
And, you know, they just tried to kill me.
And I felt like they killed my character and my character.
But I thought they were sending a message over the airwaves because they knew I had
mental health issues. I thought they wanted me to kill myself. And all my friends did too. They said, they're trying to push you to suicide and Bob Einstein
he also died during that time
he was a very good friend
he called me and said this is just unprecedented
it's evil
what they're doing to you
and it really was Joe Rogan too
I mean my friends came to me
my friends did come to me
real good friends
but none of them lived in Hollywood.
Monique too. Monique was a very dear friend. A lot of black people in Hollywood that I knew,
and a lot of Nation of Islam people that when I ran for president in 2012 that were on my campaign,
they called me too and said, oh, we knew
what was going on. And I said, well, would you say something on my behalf? The Black people said,
hell no, we're too afraid. We'll become targets. So, you know, cancel culture, it's not just cancel
culture, it's murder culture. And they never stop either. They're not happy until you're
unable to work and ultimately unable to live because they like that jackboot ground right
in your face. I mean, these people are fascists. They're not progressives or any other crap they
call themselves. They like to grind the boot right in your face in the dirt until there's
nothing left of you.
But like I say, that isn't going to happen with me.
Well, you're back.
And by the way, I mean, as you're speaking, I'm thinking about Tucker Carlson, what's happening to him right now.
It's not enough that they hired him over nothing.
I said to him, I said, you, I can tell all you people that have been canceled now, you, it's going to be rough for a while until you one day are going to realize that God took you out of Egypt.
Especially on Passover, I realize that and I talk about it a lot.
I left Egypt and it happened, you know, just around Passover too.
And that's kind of when everybody starts getting fired. If you think about it, these people, they're demonic and they do know about dates and they
know about times of the year where they can do the worst things they do.
But you got to look at it as God took you out of Egypt and you might wander in the desert
for a while, but pretty soon you're coming into the promised land like you never even
imagined.
It's total artistic freedom and the ability to speak to the people you want to reach with no intercessor.
Just like when we pray, we can speak right to God with no intercessor.
That's how I feel now.
I can talk to people and tell them it's going to be okay.
It's going to be okay.
Everything's going to work out fine.
Just around the corner.
Don't give up now. Trust me. Don't give up now. Well, I agree with every word you just said.
Stand by. We're going to take one last break and then we'll finish up with Roseanne on what's
happening now and what her next chapter looks like. What is a woman? I'll tell you what a woman is. A woman is me.
That's what a woman is, okay?
A woman is someone who cleans up everybody else's shit.
That's what a woman is.
A woman is somebody whose boobs hang down to her knees with a prolapsed uterus from giving birth
to five ungrateful little privileged bastards that have never had to work for anything in their whole
damn life my pronouns are kiss my ass.
Amazing.
That's Roseanne Barr in a special for Fox Nation called Roseanne Barr Cancel This.
And that was the clip about what is a woman.
Roseanne Barr, you are back.
Oh, and I love your hat.
She's wearing the red hat. I saw you wearing it, so I got it.
I love it.
God bless Kelly J. Keene.
She's leading us back to truth and science and reality.
The hat for the listening audience is Make Women Female Again, which I had on in a picture a couple weeks ago.
And Roseanne has a beautiful one on her head right now.
And I recommend it to everybody because it speaks the truth.
Yeah.
Yeah, that was a nightmare too in Hollywood
was that it all started with my whole problem
with the 10th season.
They put me through this gauntlet
and it was all about trans issues.
I don't know if we have time to go into it,
but I once took the side of little girls in a sauna
against this person, Colleen Francis, who was a trans, but pre-op trans, who sat in the sauna with girls between 7 and 10 years old and didn't cover her penis.
And like I say in my act, women, you've got to start covering your penises if you're around little children.
That's my advice to women.
We don't ask for much.
Yeah, but she didn't. And the parents called the police and the university ended up taking
her side, of course, against the parents and their children. But I took the children's side
and that really made the trans hate me. And the first thing they asked me at Disney when I came back was to apologize to the GLBTQ community for my transphobic remarks, which I refused to do because I said,
we can't tell kids that they have the right to their own bodies and then tell them that.
What exactly are you trying to say here? So they went after me because of that
too. Caused waves then and there as well. So in the time we have together, how are you now?
You're doing your comedy specials aired on Fox Nation. How are you feeling? How's life going going for you? I have a joyful life. I have a joyful life and I am so grateful. My mother's
89 years old. I have her. I have five beautiful children. I have eight grandchildren. I have my
health. I have my sanity. I have peace. I have my sanity I have peace
I think things are funny again
I'm hanging out with comics at Joe Rogan's
Mothership in Austin
they're so nice to me
Joe is wonderful to me
the audience loves my jokes
and I'm just telling them off
because they're young
and I'm telling them you have no idea
how bad it's going to get you kids and they love it and I'm telling them, you have no idea how bad it's going
to get you kids. And they love it. And, uh, I think I've entered into my wise old woman,
grandmother phase and I, I couldn't be more blessed. I just thank God. And you are a great
interviewer and I'm so glad I was on your show. Oh, Roseanne, thank you so much for saying that.
It's an honor to meet you.
I'm sorry for all the shit that's been thrown your way, but I love to see you emerging.
I'm sorry for the shit you've gone through, too.
And it's great to see the great interviewer you are with such kindness and compassion.
Thank you.
Aw, lots of love.
I hope you come back.
And I hope to come see you down in Austin at Joe Rogan's Club.
That would be a thrill.
Please do. Aw, lots of love. To hope you come back and I hope to come see you down in Austin at Joe Rogan's club. That would be a thrill. Please do. Lots of love to be continued. And we finished the show today with
an update on Harry and Meghan and paparazzi gate. New from NBC4 reporting in a subsequent statement
provided to them by the NYPD. The police said on Wednesday evening, May 16th, so it was in the wee
hours of Wednesday, the NYPD assisted the
private security team protecting the Duke and Duchess. There were numerous photographers that
made their transport challenging. Okay, not near catastrophic, but challenging. The Duke and
Duchess arrived at their destination and there were no reported collisions, summonses, injuries, or arrests in regard.
That is the NYPD dumping all over their catastrophic claims,
saying they were essentially a little scared, so we helped them out.
That's what happened.
It's these two who are catastrophizing, trying to play on people's sympathies
as Harry's over there in the UK filing lawsuits
and trying to make claims that he needs to be provided with security or else.
Page six adds amid the scary pursuit, Harry and Meghan and her mom were brought to the 19th
precinct that's on the Upper East Side where they remain for 15 minutes, said law enforcement
sources to NBC. The insiders claim that with the help of cops, the trio were then brought to a taxi
safely escorted to their Upper East Side destination without being followed.
They remain in New York after the harrowing occurrence,
a source told Page Six,
noting they are still upset to say the least.
Okay, so it took them two hours to get to the Upper East Side from 54th Street
in Midtown Manhattan, two hours.
This is absolutely ridiculous.
I stand by my assessment
that they have made a mountain out of a molehill.
Being a public figure can involve having your picture taken. You should know because you
orchestrate it most of the time. Sorry, but you invite these people into your life and there they
are, whether you want them or not. You're fine. Grow up. Okay. Thank you all so much for listening.
Go ahead and download the show and subscribe at youtube.com and we'll talk more tomorrow.
Thanks for listening to The Megyn Kelly Show.
No BS, no agenda, and no fear.