Sep 112009
 

On today’s edition of The Wendy Williams Show Wendy responds to Thursday’s “tweet” from R&B star and former Rihanna flame Chris Brown. Also, the world’s first self-proclaimed supermodel Janice Dickinson joined Wendy on the couch where the two chatted about everything from plastic surgery to Janice’s desire to keep her children out of the Hollywood spotlight. And Hollywood legend George Hamilton broke the news that Elizabeth Taylor’s famous mole might be a tattoo during his visit during which he also discussed the origin of his legendary tan.

Sep 102009
 

CHRIS BROWN V. WENDY WILLIAMS goes down on Friday’s episode (9/11/09) of THE WENDY WILLIAMS SHOW, host Wendy Williams responds to today’s “tweet” from R&B star and former Rihanna flame Chris Brown (whose Twitter name is Mechanical Dummy). According to Williams, Brown told followers that when he arrived at JFK, that, “one of the guyz looked like wendy williams or was it the other way around….lol.” Not willing to let that one slide without a response, Williams, who was taping her talk show when the Brown tweet went ‘round the world, used her television platform to set the record straight. Commenting on the tweet, she said…”in other words, he’s calling me a man. Well you know, at least if I was a man then I would spend my time bullying other men, perhaps, and not..women.”

Jul 282008
 

The always inquisitive Williams invited the fabulous Carson Kressley (Queer Eye) to chat about his hit make-over show on Lifetime “How to Look Good Naked.” The two also discussed Carson’s upbringing on a Pennsylvania horse farm, including a comment from Kressley regarding when he first realized he was gay: “Basically, I think I came out and the doctor slapped my butt and I was like, that was hot.”

Filmed in New York and airing weekdays exclusively on FOX owned and operated stations, ‘The Wendy Williams Show’ will be televised in New York on WNYW FOX 5 at 10:00 a.m. (ET) and air in Los Angeles/KTTV FOX 11 at 1:00 p.m. (PT); Dallas/KDFW FOX 4 at 11:00 a.m. (CT); and Detroit/WJBK FOX 2 at 12:00 p.m. (ET).

Here are a few sound bites from today’s show:

Carson on when he knew he was gay:

Wendy Williams: How old were you when you first realized you were gay?

Carson Kressley: Basically, I think I came out and the doctor slapped my butt and I was like, that was hot.

WW: Yeah. (laughing)

CK: And he’s a doctor!

WW: Yes. (laughing)

CK: I think I knew really young, when I was like four or five.

Carson in response to Wendy saying she is going to wear her bejeweled shoes with a wife beater:

CK: We don’t say wife beater, we say domestic partner beater now.

Carson in response to Wendy commenting that he was the stand-out “best friend in your head” member of Queer Eye’s Fab Five:

CK: I was the Farrah and I’m not gonna deny it.

Carson discussing Lifetime’s “How to Look Good Naked” and the last segment on the show, where the woman does a nude photo shoot:

CK: …ultimately when we get their self-esteem where it should be, we do a nude photo shoot. Which sounds crazy.

WW: Now, it’s tasteful nude…that part I don’t like.

CK: I’m not nude, but the woman is. (Audience laughter)

WW: The woman is. Now behind the scenes, are the cameramen seeing them stark naked or do they come out with paper [underwear] or pasties on?

CK: They um, we close the set down and it’s only like the two camera guys and me and they wear a robe and then after they do the lighting and everything and work with the photographer and feel comfortable, we remove the robe. There are no pasties, no nothing. I’ve seen more ladies anatomy than I’ve ever seen in my life.

WW: Makes you glad you’re gay doesn’t it?

CK: I was like, what’s that?!

Carson on growing up in a blue-collar town in Pennsylvania:

WW: So tell us where you grew up.

CK: I grew up in Allentown, Pennsylvania. (To someone screaming in the audience) We’ve got one person. We’ve got one person. I know you! (said jokingly) I went to high school with you! (To Wendy) There’s always one Allentonian in the crowd.

And uh, very like you know blue collar, middle class Pennsylvania and grew up on a horse farm.

Jul 232008
 

Omarosa is not sorry for sparring with Wendy Williams. “I stand by everything I said,” Omarosa told The Associated Press on Tuesday.

The reality star – whose full name is Omarosa Manigault-Stallworth – appeared Monday on “The Wendy Williams Show” to promote her upcoming book but instead spent more time trading insults with radio personality-turned-talk show host Wendy Williams, who infamously engaged Whitney Houston during an interview on her radio show in 2003.

“When you’re not honest with the American people, they do not respond well to you,” said Omarosa, who became famous after appearing on the first season of NBC’s “The Apprentice.” “She should just go ask Star Jones about that. Honesty needs to be there. She’s a phony. As long as she continues to be a fake and a phony, she won’t be successful.”

Omarosa told the AP that the show’s promos and introductions for her appearance are what originally ruffled her feathers and prompted her to tell Williams that she would not be disrespected. Things got uglier when Williams grabbed Omarosa’s book cover to hold it up to the camera, and Omarosa yanked it back out of Williams’ hand.

“She snatched it out of my hand,” Omarosa told the AP. “She didn’t say, ‘Can I see it?’”

The tussle gave way to Omarosa attacking Williams’ appearance, asking her whether she had had a nose job and suggesting she shouldn’t wear wigs. During the heated exchange, Williams called Omarosa a “typical angry black woman” and advised Omarosa that cosmetic injections could fix her wrinkles.

Following Omarosa’s appearance, Williams told the AP she thought the unprovoked aggression was a publicity stunt and called Omarosa “a delusional, D-list, pathetic woman.” Williams also said that Omarosa would not be invited back on “The Wendy Williams Show,” which airs on Fox-owned stations in Los Angeles, Detroit, Dallas and New York.

Omarosa was a contestant on the first season of “The Apprentice” starring Donald Trump in 2004. Her domineering personality quickly earned her enemies among fellow contestants and TV viewers. She later appeared on VH1′s “The Surreal Life” and “The Celebrity Apprentice.”