Wendy Williams has become a favorite talk show and a household name. But now, in the very real struggle for life, freedom and the future of man, the talk show is shown in a new documentary.
“She’s a human being, and she doesn’t deserve to suffer the way she suffered,” niece, Wendy Williams and goddaughter, Alex Finney, said in an interview about the star’s health ceiling fights and new documentary life expectancy.
During the in 2020, Wendy Williams almost died. The star began to isolate itself from the world. The change worries DJ Boof, who worked on “The Wendy Williams Show” before it ended.
Due to the pandemic, they started filming the show from her apartment, but Boof noticed that she “didn’t show any emotion” during filming and “is not that person anymore.”Then came the fateful day in May 2020, when Boof found her responding to her house.
Michael never expected his sunny beach day would turn into a medical nightmare… While on a missionary trip to Florida with 17 other boys from his church,…
Alain’s childhood was a maze of cold kitchens, butcher’s blocks, and slammed doors. Passed between two remarried parents, he learned early that charm could replace love, and…
Kelly Ripa’s sudden collapse has stunned even those closest to her, not just because of the severity, but because it struck someone who seemed to embody health…
Julia Roberts’ turn as Barbara Weston is less a performance than a reckoning. She abandons the glossy rom-com aura that made her a star and steps into…
What unfolded on that brightly lit stage was classic Drew Carey: quick wit, warmth, and just enough mischief to blur the line between joke and jaw-dropping moment….