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Clashing ‘Talk’ co-host says she might not return

- By Christie D'Zurilla Los Angeles Times

Sharon Osbourne, long the “big girl with the big voice” at “The Talk,” doesn’t know if she’ll return after the network finishes its investigat­ion of last week’s racially fueled dustup over her defense of Piers Morgan.

The production hiatus on CBS’ roundtable chat show, which was placed on a twoday break after Osbourne and co-host Sheryl Underwood tangled last Wednesday, was extended for a week Tuesday.

Osbourne, 68, told “Entertainm­ent Tonight” that same day that she felt she’d been set up by CBS executives. She referred to a pact the panelists allegedly made in February after Carrie Ann Inaba caught fellow co-host Elaine Welteroth off guard with a question she had been given by producers.

Inaba, who is Asian American, asked Welteroth, who is Black, what Osbourne called a “very naive” question about why white people couldn’t use the N-word. After Welteroth and Inaba both wound up in tears, Osbourne said, they all agreed that, moving forward, they wouldn’t blindside one another with surprise questions.

“I can’t keep living like this.”

Last Wednesday, Osbourne said, a producer asked her if she would “clear up the Piers thing again” even if “maybe one of them doesn’t agree with you.” But she didn’t expect Welteroth to bring up anti-racism and she didn’t expect Underwood to imply she was giving cover to racism.

“I’ve been set up,” Osbourne told “ET,” describing her thoughts in the moment. “And I went, like, how dare you all do this to me? I’m your sacrificia­l

Sharon Osbourne attends a special screening of “A Million Little Pieces” on Dec. 4, 2019, in Los Angeles. lamb.”

Osbourne did admit to “having a go” at Underwood, her friend of 11 years, including when she told Underwood “don’t try and cry,” reserving that right for herself.

“I got too personal with Sheryl. I should never have said [anything] about her tears. I should never have dismissed her feelings on national TV. Ever. But I said it, I have to own it,” she said.

Then she added fiercely, “I was so angry. I cannot begin to tell you.” But not with Welteroth or Underwood. Her anger was directed at CBS, her network of 11 years.

“I think CBS was so horrified with Piers for the things he was saying — because remember, Harry and Meghan, it’s a CBS interview,” she said, alluding to her former “America’s Got Talent” co-worker’s comments that the former Meghan Markle was lying about her mental health and suicidal thoughts.

Morgan, who was promptly accused of racism for his responses to Meghan and Prince Harry’s Oprah Winfrey interview, quit “Good Morning Britain,” the TV show he co-hosted, after abruptly walking off set last week.

Ofcom, the U.K.’s communicat­ions regulator, reported Wednesday that it had received a record 57,121 complaints, including one from the Duchess of Sussex herself, related to his “Good Morning Britain” remarks about Meghan and Harry’s conversati­on with Winfrey. (“Only 57,000? I’ve had more people than that come up & congratula­te me in the street for what I said,” Morgan said in a mocking tweet Wednesday.)

The Winfrey interview aired in the U.K. on March 8, a day after it was broadcast in the U.S. and drew high ratings.

“I had sided with Piers, so it’s the cancel culture, isn’t it? Throw her under the bus,” Osbourne said.

The panelist said “The Talk’s” two showrunner­s were in tears after the clash but refused to tell her the names of the execs they said had pushed the questionin­g.

Underwood, who prefaced her query by saying Osbourne had always been open to correction­s and willing to learn, had asked her co-host what she would say to people who thought it looked like she was giving safe haven to racist comments.

Osbourne replied by asking Underwood to tell her what Morgan had said that was racist, and the chat spiraled quickly and emotionall­y from there.

“I feel even like I’m about to be put in the electric chair because I have a friend who many people think is a racist, so that makes me a racist,” Osbourne said on “The Talk.” “And for me, at 68 years of age, to have to turn around and say, ‘I ain’t racist.’ ... How can I be racist about anybody or anything in my life? How can I?”

Osbourne explained Tuesday to “ET,” “I just felt, this is the biggest setup ever, and I’m falling into it, and I’m going deeper down this hole.”

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 ?? CASEY DURKIN/NBC VIA AP ?? This image released by NBC shows, from left, Dani Lane as Aubrey, Kenan Thompson as Kenan, and Dannah Lane as Birdie in a scene from the new comedy series, “Kenan.”
CASEY DURKIN/NBC VIA AP This image released by NBC shows, from left, Dani Lane as Aubrey, Kenan Thompson as Kenan, and Dannah Lane as Birdie in a scene from the new comedy series, “Kenan.”
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