Wendy Williams Admits Being on TV ‘Was About the Money’ and Now Only Has $15 in Treatment Facility: ‘This Is My Life’

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Wendy Williams is getting candid about her long-running daytime show as she shares an update on her life under a conservatorship.

ā€œFor me, being on TV, Iā€™m not going to lie, that was about money,ā€ Williams, 60, said Thursday, Jan. 16, on The Breakfast Club, her first interview since her dementia diagnosis went public in February 2024. ā€œRadio is my root. To be on radio to me is godsend to me. And I was doing such great stuff on radio.ā€

The Wendy Williams Show ran for 14 seasons beginning in 2008 and ended in 2022 after Williams contracted COVID and experienced health issues tied to Gravesā€™ disease. Williams started a career as a disc jockey after graduating from Northeastern University and worked at stations such as 98.7 KISS FM, Hot 97 and WBLS-FM, where she had her own syndicated show before launching her daytime TV program.

In May 2022, Williams entered a court-ordered guardianship after her financial adviser claimed she was of ā€œunsound mind,ā€ which causedĀ Wells Fargo to freeze her accounts. The Lifetime documentary Where Is Wendy Williams? filmed Williams between August 2022 and April 2023, during which she dealtĀ with various health issues and alcohol addiction following the end of her talk show.

In September 2022, Williams entered a wellness facility to help manger her ā€œoverall health issues.ā€ Her medical team announced in February 2024 that Williams had been diagnosed with primary progressive aphasia and frontotemporal dementia (FTD) the previous year.

Speaking on The Breakfast Club on Jan. 16, Williams refuted the diagnosis.

ā€œI am not cognitively impaired but I feel like I am in prison, you understand what Iā€™m saying,ā€ she told host Charlamagne tha God. ā€œIā€™m in this place with people who are in theirĀ 90s and their 80s and their 70s. ā€¦. These people, thereā€™s something wrong with these people here on this floor. I am clearly not.ā€

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Williams, who lives in a wellness facility in New York City, said she can make calls, but she does not have her usual electronics.

ā€œI can call you, but you canā€™t call me, you know what Iā€™m saying? Williams said. ā€œI donā€™t even know what kind of phone this is that I have all Iā€™m saying I that, when I call you, you listen, you donā€™t call me back, you canā€™t call me back. You understand what Iā€™m saying? I canā€™t sit on the phone, you, and look at things and scroll through things. I canā€™t do that. I do not have a laptop. You understand? I do not have an iPad. My life is my life is my goddamn life.ā€

The mother of 24-year-old son Kevin Hunter Jr. claimed she lacks the funds to buy herself a phone, as well as any other basic luxuries. Ā 

ā€œI have $15,ā€ Williams alleged. ā€œI have $15, what does that do? My money is in prison.ā€

She continued, ā€œThe guardian has somebody get me nail polish, like the normal things that I like. ā€˜I need a new hairbrush; well this is not the one I want but I guess this is the one Iā€™m forced to use.ā€™ā€

As a result, Williams said she feels ā€œlike Iā€™m in prison.ā€

ā€œI am definitely isolated, you know what Iā€™m saying?ā€ she said on The Breakfast Club. ā€œAnd to talk to these people who live here, that is not my cup of tea. Theyā€™re good people but I keep the door closed, I watch TV. I sit here as my life goes by.ā€

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