Nick Cave says ‘rage lost its allure’ after death of his two sons

Bad Seeds frontman Nick Cave said he’s lost his “rage, anger, and hatred” after the death of his two sons.

The rocker, 65, suffered an unimaginable loss when two of his children died in 2015 and 2022, respectively.

Responding to a fan’s note in his Red Hand Files newsletter, the “Where the Wild Roses Grow” hitmaker said everything was flipped upside down after he got the devastating news.

The fan’s message read: “When did you become a Hallmark card hippie? Joy, love, peace. Puke! Where’s the rage, anger, hatred? Reading these lately is like listening to an old preacher drone on and on at Sunday mass.”

Cave’s response was nothing if not honest.

“I changed,” he wrote. “For better or for worse, the rage you speak of lost its allure, and, yes, perhaps I became a Hallmark card hippie. Hatred stopped being interesting. Those feelings were like old dead skins that I shed. They were their own kind of puke.”


Susie Bick and Nick Cave pose with their children Earl and Arthur (right) at the Philip Treacy show on at The Royal Courts Of Justice on Sep. 16, 2012 in London.
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He went on, “Sitting around in my own mess, pissed off at the world, disdainful of the people in it, and thinking my contempt for things somehow amounted to something, had some kind of nobility, hating this thing here, and that thing there, and that other thing over there, and making sure that everybody around me knew it, not just knew, but felt it too, contemptuous of beauty, contemptuous of joy, contemptuous of happiness in others, well, this whole attitude just felt, I don’t know, in the end, sort of dumb.”

The rocker said the loss of his son made him experience “actual devastation.”

“I started to understand the precarious and vulnerable position of the world. I started to fret for it. Worry about it,” he continued.


Nick Cave and Susie Bick are seen with their sons Arthur and Earl — as they attend the gala screening of the 'Doctor Who' Christmas episode on Dec. 18, 2007 in London.
Nick Cave and Susie Bick are seen with their sons Arthur and Earl — as they attend the gala screening of the ‘Doctor Who’ Christmas episode on Dec. 18, 2007 in London.
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“I felt a sudden, urgent need to, at the very least, extend a hand in some way to assist it – this terrible, beautiful world – instead of merely vilifying it, and sitting in judgment of it.”

Cave’s son with Susie Bick, Arthur, died in 2015 after he fell from a cliff in Brighton, England. He was only 15 years old.

The coroner noted at the time that Arthur’s death was accidental and that he had taken LSD shortly before his death.

In May 2022, Cave’s elder son Jethro Lazenby died at age 31.

Cave confirmed his son’s passing to NME in a statement, “With much sadness, I can confirm that my son, Jethro, has passed away. We would be grateful for family privacy at this time.”

No cause of death for Lazenby has been revealed yet.

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Yung Gravy sued by Rick Astley over ‘Never Gonna Give You Up’ voice rip off

It’s not all gravy, baby.

Yung Gravy is reportedly being sued by “Never Gonna Give You Up” hitmaker Rick Astley over the up-and-coming rapper’s track “Betty (Get Money).”

Astley reportedly claims Gravy did not get permission to use or impersonate his voice.

Astley reportedly claims Gravy did not get permission to use or impersonate his voice.


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According to TMZ, Astley, 56, claims 26-year-old Gravy (real name: Matthew Raymond Hauri) ripped off his vocals from his most popular song — which was released in 1987 — by using an impersonated version of his voice.

Astley — who is also suing the vocal impersonator, Nick Seeley — reportedly claims Gravy and his producers “conspired to include a deliberate and nearly indistinguishable imitation of … Astley’s voice throughout the song,” which dropped in June 2022.

Seeley, Dwilly and EDM A-lister Dillon Francis are listed as producers on “Betty (Get Money);” however, it’s unclear whether the latter two have been named as defendants.

Though Gravy did license the instrumental part of Astley’s song, the English singer-songwriter claims he did not give the rapper or anyone on his team permission to use or impersonate his voice, per TMZ.

Astley’s suit reportedly argues that Gravy admitted to playing with fire with regard to impersonating the ’80s musician, pointing to an August 2022 interview with Billboard.

“My boy Nick, who does a lot of sample replays and recreating original samples, we basically remade the whole song,” the SoundCloud sensation told the publication of getting Astley’s “Never Gonna Give You Up” sample cleared.

Astley is reportedly seeking millions of dollars from Gravy.

Astley is reportedly seeking millions of dollars from Gravy.


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“Had a different singer and instruments, but it was all really close because it makes it easier legally.”

According to TMZ, Astley claims the experience has ruined any future opportunities for him to collaborate with other artists, and he is seeking millions of dollars from Gravy.

“Never Gonna Give You Up” was released in 1987 and went on to become Astley’s most popular song.

Gravy — who made headlines last year for being in a suspected “PR relationship” with TikToker Addison Rae’s mom — had “no comment” when contacted by Page Six.

Astley’s reps did not immediately get back to us.

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Jeff Bezos girlfriend Lauren Sanchez didn’t make ‘The View’

When Lauren Sanchez left Fox to start contributing to “Extra,” she was ready for her TV career to take flight. But she didn’t reach her dream destination.

The 53-year-old TV host and helicopter pilot who has catapulted into the public eye with her relationship with Amazon founder Jeff Bezos in 2019, recalled in an interview with WSJ Magazine the moment she felt like her career was crashing down in 1999. She didn’t get her dream job — a role on Barbara Walters daytime talk show “The View.” 

“It was one of the most devastating days of my life,”  Sánchez told Derek Blasberg in an interview with WSJ Magazine published Wednesday. 

Sanchez recalled bonding instantly with Walters while auditioning for “The View,” though she admitted clashing with original cast member lawyer and journalist Star Jones, 60. Their differences may have cost her the role. Instead, journalist Lisa Ling took the coveted spot alongside Jones, Meredith Vierra, Joy Behar and Walters, who personally phoned Sanchez to tell her the disappointing news that left her in tears for days. 

Sanchez said Jones later apologized and that Walters remained a mentor. 


Lauren Sanchez (from left) on “The View” with Star Jones and Barbara Walters.

“She [Walters] really helped me with my career. Not only as someone I looked up to, but really guided me when I was up for The View,” Sánchez told WSJ Magazine after Walters died in December. 

“Producers were trying to make me dress extra conversative and she saw me and said, ‘What happened?’ She said, ‘They will try and make you ordinary. Don’t let them. Then, if you fail, at least you fail as yourself.’ I never forgot that.” 

She found the silver lining in the career setback. 

“It turned out to be a good thing because I wouldn’t have had Nikko,” Sánchez said of giving birth to her first child, who is now 21, with former NFL tight end Tony Gonzalez. 

“Everything happens for a reason,” she said.


Sanchez, 53, an Emmy-award winning TV host and helicopter pilot, catapulted into the public eye for her relationship with Amazon founder Jeff Bezos in 2019.
Daniel Jack Lyons for WSJ. Magaz

Before TV, Sanchez initially wanted to be a flight attendant. At age 18, she moved to Los Angeles with hopes of working for Southwest Airlines. Her weight thrawted her from landing the role.

“Back then, they weighed you, and I weighed 121 pounds,” she told WSJ Mag of a required weigh-in she failed back in 1989, during the time weight restrictions were common in the industry. “They said, ‘You need to be 115.’”


Lauren Sanchez and Jeff Bezos.
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Today, she said, she’d clap back saying: “I don’t want to be a stewardess. I want to be the pilot!” 

Her relationship with Bezos has also taken flight with the duo jet setting to the likes of the Taj Mahal, hiking with King Charles in Scotland and getting chatty with Leonardo DiCaprio at the LACMA gala.

Sanchez cut her teeth in Hollywood at age 28 when she landed a small role as a TV reporter on “Fight Club” in 1999 doing a breaking news segment on underground boxing clubs.

“Jared Leto calls me hot—I peaked!” she quipped.

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Nia Long holds back tears recalling months following Ime Udoka split

Nia Long fought back tears as she reflected on the “devastating” months following her split from fiancé Ime Udoka.

“I’ve had some pretty devastating moments in my life over the last couple of months,” she told Yahoo! Entertainment over the weekend.

“And I’ve had to just say, ‘It’s alright. You’ll pick yourself back up and’ — oh my god. I’m about to cry. ‘You’ll pick yourself back up and keep moving,’” she added as she fanned her face with her hands to stop herself from crying.

The “Missing” actress held back tears as she talked about how her life has been following her split from her fiancé.
Instagram/nialong

The “Best Man” actress’ emotional revelation comes four months after the Boston Celtics announced that Udoka, 45, would be suspended as head coach for allegedly having “an intimate relationship with a female member of the franchise’s staff.”

Following his suspension, Udoka issued a public apology to his team, the entire Celtics organization and his family for “letting them down.”

“I am sorry for putting the team in this difficult situation, and I accept the team’s decision,” he said in a statement to ESPN in September. “Out of respect for everyone involved, I will have no further comment.” 

Long was “blindsided” by Udoka’s cheating.
Long was “blindsided” by Udoka’s cheating.


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Long was “blindsided” by Udoka’s cheating.


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Long was reportedly “blindsided” by the affair and Udoka only told her about the cheating days before he knew the news would become public.

Two months later, Long spoke out about how the scandal has impacted her and Udoka’s 11-year-old son, Kez.

“I think the most heartbreaking thing about all of this was seeing my son’s face when the Boston Celtics organization decided to make a very private situation public,” she told The Hollywood Reporter last December.

“No one from the Celtics organization has even called to see if I’m OK, to see if my children are OK,” the “Boyz n the Hood” star continued. “It’s very disappointing.”

Udoka was suspended from the Celtics for allegedly having “an intimate relationship with a female member of the franchise’s staff.”
NBAE via Getty Images

Later that month, Long’s rep confirmed to People that she and the former NBA coach were “no longer together but remain fully committed to co-parenting their son.”

A source also told the outlet that “the situation is unfortunate and painful, but Nia is focusing on her children and rebuilding her life.”

Last December, a rep for Long revealed that the “Friday” actress called it quits with the former head coach.

Last December, a rep for Long revealed that the “Friday” actress called it quits with the former head coach.


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Last December, a rep for Long revealed that the “Friday” actress called it quits with the former head coach.


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Udoka and Long began dating in 2010 after meeting through mutual friends. In 2015, the former couple got engaged.

Long is also a mom to son Massai II, 22, from a previous relationship.



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Sam Smith addresses rumors that they’re actually Adele

“Rumor Has It” Adele and Sam Smith might be one and the same.

Smith — who is non-binary and uses they/them pronouns — confessed to Drew Barrymore, 47, that the craziest rumor they’ve ever heard about themselves is that they are secretly Adele in drag.

“Everyone seems to think that I’m Adele in drag,” the 30-year-old singer said on “The Drew Barrymore Show.” 

“‘Cause we’ve never been seen in the same room together, and if you slow down her voice it sounds maybe a bit like mine. So people think that we’re the same person and I’m just in drag right now,” they continued.

The conspiracy theory that Smith and Adele, 34, are the same person seems to have started circulating the internet in 2018 when one person posted a video of Adele’s music slowed down, which ended up sounding like Smith.

Sam Smith addressed rumors that they’re actually Adele.
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“Did you know that when you slow down Adele it’s actually Sam Smith,” the user tweeted along with video “evidence.”

Around the same time, another user pointed out that Smith and Adele both didn’t attend the Grammys that year.

“Anyone notice that Adele isn’t at the Grammys this year? It’s because Adele and Sam Smith are the same person and you’ll never see them both in the same place at the same time,” the person tweeted.

Other fans weren’t so sure about the rumors.

“Nobody ever, in their wildest fever dream, while drunk and high on opioids has EVER said Sam Smith is Adele in drag,” one person said. “The VOICE? For sure pitched sounds like it. But physically? Even a blind man wouldn’t make that mistake.”

Sam Smith on “The Drew Barrymore Show.”
The Drew Barrymore Show
Adele attends The BRIT Awards 2022 on February 8, 2022, in London, England.
Samir Hussein/WireImage

“One thing is ‘hey, they sound similar!’ and another one is ‘Adele is Sam Smith in drag!’ Not quite the same,” another tweeted.

“I want Adele’s reaction to what Sam smith said,” someone joked.

While Adele and Smith are both London-born singers, that’s about the extent of their similarities.

Smith’s album “Gloria” will be released on Jan. 27.



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Brooke Shields talks nude scenes in Sundance’s ‘Pretty Baby’

PARK CITY, Utah — It’s easy to forget that actress Brooke Shields was performing nude scenes in major films at 11 years old.

But the new Hulu documentary “Pretty Baby: Brooke Shields,” which premiered Friday at the Sundance Film Festival, reveals the actress was objectified and mistreated by Hollywood and the media in a manner that would be unconscionable today for a kid.

At 15, a director aggressively twisted her limb to get her to make an extreme face during a sex scene; her Calvin Klein jeans ads were called “child sex exploitation” by the papers; and the actress was raped by a filmmaker in LA shortly after she graduated from Princeton.

“Sometimes I’m amazed I survived any of it,” Shields, now 57, said in the doc. 

Her modeling career began in New York City in 1966 when she was barely a year old, with her mom Teri Shields acting as her manager. She worked frequently, and was featured in TV and magazine ads for BandAid, Bounce, shampoo products, and many other products. The little girl was the family breadwinner.

One publication called her: “America’s newest sexy kid.”

“I remember thinking, ‘I hope she’s OK,” childhood friend Laura Linney said in the documentary. “She was a young girl in an all-adult world.”

Her big break came in French director Louis Malle’s controversial 1978 film “Pretty Baby,” in which Shields played a 12-year-old New Orleans prostitute when she was 11 — and had to shoot several nude scenes.

Brooke Shields (right) attends the Sundance premiere of “Pretty Baby: Brooke Shields” with director Lana Wilson.
Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP

In the doc, she calls the movie “a real artistic endeavor,” but still uncomfortably recalled her kiss scene — her actual first kiss — with actor Keith Carradine, who was nearly 30 at the time.

“I’d never kissed anybody before,” she said, adding that Carradine told her, “This doesn’t count. It’s pretend. It’s all make believe.”

“I think I learned how to compartmentalize at an early age,” Shields added. “It was a survival technique.”

Her clothes were off again during 1980’s “Blue Lagoon,” a sex-heavy teen romance film in which her character got hot and heavy with her cousin, played by Christopher Atkins, on a deserted island. Shields was 14 then.

The next year brought one of her worst on-set experiences during shooting of “Endless Love.” Shields, who was a virgin at the time, had to shoot a sex scene with co-star Martin Hewitt. Italian director Franco Zeffirelli was unhappy with her facial expressions, so he got physical with the actress.

In 1980’s “Blue Lagoon,” a teenage Shields had ample sex scenes.
Bettmann

“Zeffirelli kept grabbing my toe and twisting it so I had a look of, I guess, ecstasy,” she said. “He was hurting me.”

Shields added: “I really shut down after that.”

(Zeffirielli, who died in 2019, told this same story blithely during a TV interview at the time.)

Escaping the film industry for a while, Shields attended Princeton as an undergrad. But when she graduated, having been absent from Hollywood for four years, she found it impossible to book gigs outside of foreign commercials. So, a friend called her to discuss a project she’d heard he was making.

Shields says she “shut down” after her negative experience with director Franco Zeffirelli during “Endless Love.”
AP

“We had dinner and I thought it was a work meeting,” she said. “There was to talk about the movie, the part in the movie.”

The man, who Shields does not name, said to come back to his a hotel to call a cab, and then told her to wait in his room.

“The door opens, and the person comes out naked,” she said. “He’s right on me … just like wrestling.

Today, Shields is married with two daughters.
AFP via Getty Images

“I didn’t fight that much. I didn’t. I just absolutely froze,” she added of the rape. “I cried all the way to my friend’s apartment.” 

Shields had never publicly discussed the alleged attack before this documentary.

Today the actress, who is married to husband Chris Henchy and has two teen daughters, speaks with pride about her career, but also rejects the way she was discussed, behaved toward and looked at in her youth.

“The entirety of my life was always, over and over and over again, ‘she’s a pretty face,’ ‘she’s a sex symbol,’” Shields said. “And that just seared me.” 

“Pretty Baby: Brooke Shields” his Hulu later this year.

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Emilia Clarke hatches an egg

PARK CITY, UTAH — The Mother of Dragons becomes The Mother of An Artificially Grown Fetus in “The Pod Generation,” a wobbly new science-fiction comedy that premiered Thursday night at the Sundance Film Festival.

Emilia Clarke from “Game of Thrones” stars in the satire of our increasingly close relationship with technology as Rachel, a futuristic workaholic who decides to have a baby using a “pod,” an egg-shaped, electronic device in which a fetus develops outside the mother’s body.


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Running time: 101 minutes. Not yet rated.

It’s the hottest trend in New York — which in a few decades will be clean, gleaming and somehow spacious! — and there’s an original-iPhone-style waitlist for the privilege. For many, there are only upsides: ambitious types no longer need to take maternity leave from the office, or do any harm to their figures.

Of course, like a lot of hyped-up gadgets, Humpty Dumpty looks totally ridiculous. Moms-to-be awkwardly lug their cumbersome pods on the subway in a harness, earning judgmental glares from actual pregnant women.

But intensely focused, bliss-seeking Rachel doesn’t care about raised brows.

When she gets to the enviable front of the line, she pushes her unwitting husband Alvy (Chiwetel Ejiofor) to sign up with the pod’s Stepford Wifey founder Linda (Rosalie Craig). That’s a tough task. Alvy is a proud university botanist in a society that’s gradually doing away with the natural world (instead of hikes, people go inside “nature pods”), and he is skeptical of anything that defies what it is to be human, such as an Easy Bake Oven for babies.

Emilia Clarke played Daenerys Targaryen on”Game of Thrones.”

Nonetheless, he relents and surprisingly starts to grow attached to the digi-mom.

Meanwhile, we start to become antsy for more drama and less clever exposition. Only a fraction of a frisson comes from Rachel’s simmering insecurities as she struggles to develop a maternal connection to this idling Womba that rests on a glowing charger, vacuum style. It’s funny when she consults her artificial therapist, a giant floating eye positioned in the middle of a wreath like some freaky goddess. Yet, considering all her emotional turmoil, Rachel never raises her voice, and her and Alvy don’t have any fights.

Despite not having much meat to chew on, Clarke is solid and makes a statement that she can do domesticity as well as dragons. Rachel is a tad cool to the touch, though. Ejiofor, playing charismatic Alvy, is easier to embrace as he voices all our own doubts about this absurd situation.

Writer-director Sophie Barthes nobly resists the urge to succumb to an explosive dystopian conclusion a la “Black Mirror,” which is what her film otherwise feels like. However, in keeping “Pod Generation” a light comedy that pokes fun at topics as wide-ranging as Amazon’s Alexa and warring feminist sects, we grow weary of the monotony. The ending believes itself to be much more satisfying than it actually is.

A rather obvious “Brave New World” “a-ha!” moment comes a little while before that. In our ruthless quest for convenience, Barthes’ film suggests, we’ve handed our intimate lives over to corporations. Right now, it’s data; soon, it could be birth.

That’s all well and good. But a movie needs more than a smart idea and an impressively visualized concept of the future to run smoothly. Two thirds of the way through, “The Pod Generation”‘s battery is already at 1%.

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Fall Out Boy guitarist Joe Trohman announces break from band

Fall Out Boy founding member and guitarist Joe Trohman announced that he is stepping away from the band.

Just hours after announcing their upcoming new album, titled “So Much (For) Stardust,” Trohman took to social media to say his mental health has “rapidly deteriorated” and forced him to slam the brakes on his music career.

“Without divulging all the details, I must disclose that my mental health has rapidly deteriorated over the past several years,” Trohman wrote in a post on Fall Out Boy’s Instagram page.

Patrick Stump, Pete Wentz, Joe Trohman and Andy Hurley of Fall Out Boy attend The Kerrang! Awards at Shoreditch Town Hall on June 23, 2022 in London.
Dave J Hogan/Getty Images

“So, to avoid fading away and never returning, I will be taking a break from work which regrettably includes stepping away from Fall Out Boy for a spell.”

“Neil Young once howled that it’s better to burn out than to fade away,” Trohman wrote in the message. “But I can tell you unequivocally that burning out is dreadful.”

Trohman founded the pop-punk band with vocalist Patrick Stump in 2001. The pair then added bassist Pete Wentz and drummer Andy Hurley into the fold in the ensuing years.

A photo of Joe Trohman’s latest Instagram post is shown.

In Trohman’s announcement, he referenced the band’s hotly anticipated upcoming album — the first since 2018 — set for release on March 24.

“It pains me to make this decision, especially when we are releasing a new album that fills me with great pride (the sin I’m most proud of),” he wrote.

Joe Trohman said to avoid “fading away” he would need to step away from Fall Out Boy.
Redferns

Trohman reassured fans that his break from the group is temporary.

“So, the question remains: Will I return to the fold? Absolutely, one-hundred percent,” he wrote. “In the meantime, I must recover which means putting myself and my mental health first.”

Joe Trohman told his fans that he will return and come back to the band, citing he’s only taking a temporary break.
Getty Images for iHeartMedia

Trohman thanked his bandmates and family for “understanding and respecting this difficult, but necessary, decision.”

“Smell you sooner than later, Joe Trohman,” he concluded.



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Todd and Julie Chrisley’s fall from grace: The inside story

When the Chrisley family burst onto the reality scene in 2014 with USA Network’s “Chrisley Knows Best” they were the Southern-blond answer to the Kardashians: wealthy and extremely tight knit, with a dollop of “bless your heart” attitude.

In an early promo for the show, Todd Chrisley, the flamboyant, controlling-but-endearing patriarch bragged about the money he supposedly made in real estate. He was quick to note that his family — wife Julie and their three children, Chase, Savannah and Grayson, now ages 26, 25 and 16 respectively, along with Todd’s children from an earlier marriage, Lindsie, now 33, and Kyle, 31 — lived in a gated community outside of Atlanta. They were neighbors with former Braves great Chipper Jones and singer Usher, Chrisley boasted, and the fam dropped a cool $300,000 a year on clothing alone.

The Chrisley family pose for a portrait during their first season. (Pictureed left to right) Savannah Chrisley, Lindsie Chrisley Campbell, Julie Chrisley, Todd Chrisley, Kyle Chrisley, Chase Chrisley, Grayson Chrisley
NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via

“I try to keep everything in order and in line. I have a certain level of expectations for my children, for my wife, for myself,” Chrisley, now 53, said in the promo.

But the family’s wealthy facade all came crumbling down last spring when Todd and Julie were found guilty of bank fraud and tax evasion in a sensational trial. Now the show’s over: On Tuesday, Todd and Julie will report to prison, where he’s been sentenced for 12 years and she to seven.

“The Chrisleys have built an empire based on the lie that their wealth came from dedication and hard work,” prosecutors wrote in a sentencing memorandum on Nov. 16.

“The jury’s unanimous verdict sets the record straight: Todd and Julie Chrisley are career swindlers who have made a living by jumping from one fraud scheme to another, lying to banks, stiffing vendors, and evading taxes at every corner.”

Todd and Julie Chrisley leaving Atlanta Federal Court in August 2022.
FOX 5 Atlanta

The couple had humble, wholesome beginnings. They both hail from rural Westminster, South Carolina, a once-thriving textile town that as of 2021 had a population of around 2363.

Their money troubles go back years, before they even had a reality show. In 2012, Chrisley filed for Chapter 7, listing $4.2 million in assets and $49.4 million in debt. At the time, he claimed to have only $55 in a checking account and $100 in cash.

“He guaranteed a real estate development loan and it failed,” his attorney Robert Furr explained to People in 2014. “He was on the hook for $30 million. If he hadn’t had that happen, he would have been fine, financially.”

Such money issues didn’t keep the family from reality stardom. By the end of 2016, the Chrisley’s show was already in its fourth season and the clan’s profile was on the rise — so much so that security concerns led them to relocate to Nashville.

Todd and Julie Chrisley in 2018.
Getty Images

There, they bought two mansions worth roughly a combined $9 million and continued to drive flashy cars while their kids became podcasters and Instagram influencers with millions of followers.

Amid his success, Chrisley offered to donate money in 2016 and build an aquatic center in his hometown of Westminster with one condition: It had to be named for his late father Gene Chrisley.

But what looked like a generous gesture from a hometown boy-made-good quickly devolved into an ugly conflict that divided the locale and showcased Todd’s uncanny ability to whip up drama even when the cameras weren’t rolling.

“Most doubted the offer was sincere, but the [town] council remained open in learning more,” former town administrator Chris Carter told The Post.

The Chrisley family in the in a season 8 promo.
NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images

When the project stalled, Todd took to Facebook blasting detractors, some of whom were private citizens of Westminster. He bragged about his show’s ratings and flashed their Facebook profiles across the screen, urging his own followers to confront them online.

“Facebook brought out the trolls who posted pretty negative things about the town because of the city’s perceived reticence to take Chrisley [up] on the offer. Lots of them, I understand, did not even live in the Westminster area — the show’s groupies I suppose,” said Carter.

He added that Todd then created an additional stipulation for his donation: that the town’s council, except for one woman, resign.

Todd and Julie Chrisley purchased this six-bedroom, 10-bathroom home back in 2019 for $3,37 million.
Zeitlin Sotheby’s International

“Most peple felt like in the town they were being played and it turned out they were. Other than for the show drama of it, there was nothing substantive ever talked about. It was all to gin up animosity and division,” continued Carter.

In the end, no money was donated and no pool was built. A few locals said the saga, which was covered in the local press, was just another chapter in the ostensibly fabulous life of the self-styled mogul.

“He’s all hat and no cattle,” quipped one local. (Chrisley did not respond to a request for comment on the matter.)

Meanwhile, the family’s personal dramas were making for good TV.

Back in 2015, Todd Chrisley posed behind bars as a joke.
Todd Chrisley /Facebook

While it often focused on lighthearted family conflict such as sibling rivalry, Savannah’s pageants and household pranks, “Chrisley Knows Best” didn’t shy away from serious issues. Kyle struggled with drug addiction and mental health, so much so that Todd and Julie legally adopted his daughter Chloe, now 10, when she was a toddler.

In 2019, Savannah and Chase launched their own spinoff, “Growing Up Chrisley.” It would go on to run for four seasons — until Todd and Julie were convicted, at which point both it and “Chrisley Knows Best” were abruptly canceled.

The trial also took an ax to Todd’s reputation of being a devoted family man. His former business partner Mark Braddock testified that he and Todd were intimate for about a year in the early 2000s.

Chrisley has denied the claims.

Todd Chrisley and his family in happier times.
NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via

“What insulted me the most is that, out of all these 54 years, for me to finally be accused of being with a man, it would be someone who looked like Mark Braddock,” Todd said on a recent episode of his podcast “Chrisley Confessions.” He added that Braddock resembled a “toad.”

The Chrisleys are just the latest reality show stars to face federal charges. In 2014, “Real Housewives of New Jersey” stars Teresa and Joe Giudice both pleaded guilty to several counts including bankruptcy fraud, conspiracy to commit both mail fraud wire fraud as well as failing to pay taxes.

Earlier this month, “Real Housewives of Salt Lake City” star Jen Shah was sentenced to six-and-a-half-years in prison for heading a years-long telemarketing scam that targeted elderly Americans

But, the Chrisleys are maintaining their innocence.

“As a family, we are still united and standing firm in our positions and in our faith. We don’t waiver in our faith,” the patriarch said on the podcast. “Now listen. Are we disappointed? Are we hurt? Yes, but we know that God has a purpose for everything.”



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