Wendy Williams is trying to set the record straight.
After the former “Wendy Williams Show” host, 60, broke down crying over her health and court-ordered conservatorship in a rare interview with Charlamagne tha God on Thursday, she jumped on the horn with her friend longtime Don Lemon for his podcast to address the speculation surrounding his alleged incapacity.
“My life is ridiculous,” she told the former CNN anchor. “I have been with this tutor for three years. For three years of my life… I was isolated. I feel like I’m in prison. I can’t go out. All I can do is look out the window.
Williams – who revealed she was living at a wellness center in New York – replied: “Fuck no” when Lemon, 58, asked if she was “incapacitated”, as l ‘said his guardian, Sabrina E. Morrissey.
Lemon then asked Williams about his health, noting that Morrissey “said you were permanently incapacitated and suffering from dementia,” referring to his conservator’s filing of a lawsuit in November against A&E Television Networks, Lifetime Entertainment and more so during the 2024 docuseries “Where’s Wendy.” Williams?
The investigation appeared to shake Williams, who told Lemon: “I don’t know how much I can talk without being punished.” »
She also expressed fear that “I won’t be able to see my father, and I won’t be able to do anything, and I’ll be stuck in this prison that I’ll be in for the rest of my life” if she says too much about her conservatorship, which has was implemented in May 2022 and left her family in the dark about her whereabouts and without access to her.
Williams has expressed his dissatisfaction with his current status.
“I’m not in a good place,” she shared. “My life is ruined. You know, this mess of guards is… please listen, I’m isolated. I feel like I’m in prison. I feel like, you know, they’re trying to control me and control everything I do.
Earlier in the day, Williams broke down in tears while echoing her sentiment on “The Breakfast Club.”
“Do I look like that, dammit?” she responded after insisting she “didn’t have any cognitive impairments,” although her “care team” claimed she had been diagnosed with frontotemporal dementia and aphasia in 2023.
The popular former presenter claimed she only had “$15” and had no access to the internet via a laptop or iPad.
“It’s called psychological abuse,” she said.
Williams’ niece, Alex Finnie, was also in play and fiercely defended her aunt’s mental state.
“Anyone who knows my aunt knows she always had a unique personality,” Finnie said. “How she talks, that’s her. This is who she is. Don’t try to distort his way of being.
Last year, Morrissey filed a lawsuit against A&E Television Networks in an attempt to stop the documentary from being broadcast. A&E and Lifetime countered, saying Morrissey knew Williams’ struggles would be shown in the doc.
Williams — who last appeared on her former talk show in June 2022 — has made several rare appearances lately.
She was photographed at her son Kevin Jr.’s college graduation in Miami in December and smiling in the backseat of a car with her nephew, Travis Finnie, in Fort Lauderdale.
The Post has contacted Morrissey for comment.