Wendy Williams continues to speak out against her conservatorship and the conditions at her assisted living facility. The former talk show host recently spoke candidly during a five-minute phone interview on NewsNation’s Banfield,
According to the facility employee, the former daytime talk show host showed no signs of dementia or memory loss: "Wendy doesn't have good and bad days. She's the same all the time. You can tell her something today, and 2 weeks later, she'll remember it. Her memory is fine."
"I'm ready to get out of here," she said of the facility. "I'm ready to get out and get out of the guardianship. It's suffocating, it's very lonely"
"#FreeWendy all the way, all day, and she really just needs our love and support," Suzanne Bass said in a video on Instagram.
Wendy Williams shares her struggles living in an assisted living facility under a legal conservatorship, expressing feelings of isolation and confinement
Wendy Williams' conservatorship has continued to look sketchy as she reveals more details. She says she feels suffocated everyday.
Despite reports of tensions between Wendy and her son, Kevin Hunter Jr., she made it clear that there is no bad blood between them. While Kevin has previously spoken out against Wendy’s guardianship, and their relationship has been under scrutiny, she assured listeners that things between them remain solid.
As the public continues to grow concerned for Wendy Williams, the talk show host’s former producer weighs in on the “terrifying” guardianship situation. In a post on Instagram, producer Suzanne Bass broke her silence about the situation.
Like Spears’s and Bynes’s fans, Williams’s most devout acolytes have been studying the conversation around guardianships. Jarrius Adams, a 27-year-old Washington, DC–based attorney focused on voting rights, runs a small account on X, @FreeWendy2025, aimed at raising awareness about what he described to me as Morrissey’s failings.