Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Roseanne Barr Blames Sara Gilbert Tweet For Getting Reboot Canceled In 2018 In Bonkers Rant

Roseanne Barr; Sara Gilbert
Steven Ferdman/Getty Images; Rich Fury/Getty Images

The former 'Roseanne' star lashed out at her former costars, particularly Gilbert, during an interview with Megyn Kelly over the cancellation of the reboot following her racist comments.

Roseanne Barr's Roseanne reboot was canceled in 2018 because of erratic behavior and racist comments she made on Twitter. That's a well known and indisputable fact.

But Barr, even all these years later, sees it differently.


Five years later, Barr is blaming her costar Sara Gilbert, who played Darlene Conner on the franchise, for the show's cancellation.

During a recent appearance on Megyn Kelly's SiriusXM podcast The Megyn Kelly Show, Barr claimed that it wasn't her racist comments that got the show canceled but rather Gilbert's reaction thereto that did the trick.

See her interview with Kelly below.

youtu.be

Barr had made several shocking and offensive comments in 2018 during the Roseanne reboot's run, including several in support of former Republican President Donald Trump.

Others were laced with anti-semitic conspiracy theories about billionaire Democratic donor George Soros, a favorite bogeyman of right-wing crackpots.

But the straw that broke the camel's back was a series of tweets in which Barr referred to Valerie Jarrett, a senior advisor to former Democratic President Barack Obama, as being what happens when the “muslim brotherhood & planet of the apes had a baby.” Barr later claimed she thought Jarrett, a Black woman, was white.

Gilbert, the executive producer of the reboot, tweeted at the time calling Barr's comments "abhorrent" and saying she was "disappointed...to say the least" in Barr's conduct. Barr told Kelly it was Gilbert's tweet that got Roseanne canceled.

Barr told Kelly:

"She repeatedly twisted it. It was her tweet that canceled the show...

She went on to claim:

“I called [Gilbert] up and 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 you know, my voice can be very scary."

If that story is true, it had very little impact--Barr went on to sign away her rights to Roseanne, which was subsequently spun-off by Gilbert and co-EP Tom Werner into The Conners, a version of the show in which Barr's character had been killed off.

The decision clearly still irks Barr, who told Kelly:

"I was just floored. And you know, but she ends up owning my work and Tom Werner becomes her partner in owning my work.”

On Twitter, many people had very little sympathy for Barr.









Barr also told Kelly she thought the decision to kill her character off was a message from Gilbert et. al. that they wanted her to kill herself.

“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."

Anyway, The Conners has been renewed for a sixth season, which will premiere this fall.

More from Entertainment/tv-and-movies

Keira Knightly in 'Love Actually'
Universal Pictures

Keira Knightley Admits Infamous 'Love Actually' Scene Felt 'Quite Creepy' To Film

UK actor Keira Knightley recalled filming the iconic cue card scene from the 2003 Christmas rom-com Love Actually was kinda "creepy."

The Richard Curtis-directed film featured a mostly British who's who of famous actors and young up-and-comers playing characters in various stages of relationships featured in separate storylines that eventually interconnect.

Keep ReadingShow less
Nancy Mace
Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images

Nancy Mace Miffed After Video Of Her Locking Lips With Another Woman Resurfaces

South Carolina Republican Representative Nancy Mace is not happy after video from 2016 of her "baby birding" a shot of alcohol into another woman's mouth resurfaced.

The video, resurfaced by The Daily Mail, shows Mace in a kitchen pouring a shot of alcohol into her mouth, then spitting it into another woman’s mouth. The second woman, wearing a “TRUMP” t-shirt, passed the shot to a man, who in turn spit it into a fourth person’s mouth before vomiting on the floor.

Keep ReadingShow less
Ryan Murphy; Luigi Mangione
Gregg DeGuire/Variety via Getty Images, MyPenn

Fans Want Ryan Murphy To Direct Luigi Mangione Series—And They Know Who Should Play Him

Luigi Mangione is facing charges, including second-degree murder, after the 26-year-old was accused of fatally shooting UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson outside the New York Hilton Midtown hotel on December 4.

Before the suspect's arrest on Sunday at a McDonald's in Altoona, Pennsylvania, the public was obsessed with updates on the manhunt, especially after Mangione was named a "strong person of interest."

Keep ReadingShow less
Donald Trump
NBC

Trump Proves He Doesn't Understand How Citizenship Works In Bonkers Interview

President-elect Donald Trump was criticized after he openly lied about birthright citizenship and showed he doesn't understand how it works in an interview with Meet the Press on Sunday.

Birthright citizenship is a legal concept that grants citizenship automatically at birth. It exists in two forms: ancestry-based citizenship and birthplace-based citizenship. The latter, known as jus soli, a Latin term meaning "right of the soil," grants citizenship based on the location of birth.

Keep ReadingShow less
Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC

77 Nobel Prize Winners Write Open Letter Urging Senate Not To Confirm RFK Jr. As HHS Secretary

A group of 77 Nobel laureates wrote an open letter to Senate lawmakers stressing that confirming Robert F. Kennedy Jr. as President-elect Donald Trump's Secretary of Health and Human Services "would put the public’s health in jeopardy and undermine America’s global leadership in health science."

The letter, obtained by The New York Times, represents a rare move by Nobel laureates, marking the first time in recent memory they have collectively opposed a Cabinet nominee, according to Richard Roberts, the 1993 Nobel laureate in Physiology or Medicine, who helped draft it.

Keep ReadingShow less