logo
For the love of God and gaudy: How the Chrisleys built, lost and could rebuild an empire in Trump's America

For the love of God and gaudy: How the Chrisleys built, lost and could rebuild an empire in Trump's America

CNN5 days ago

In the final episode of their podcast before they reported to prisons hundreds of miles apart, married TV reality stars Julie and Todd Chrisley played a voice message from a listener named Angie.
Angie said she was sorry about the verdict, was praying for the couple daily and was certain that 'this test will become a testimony.'
Julie Chrisley, who with her husband made their family D-list famous on a brand defined by spending and scripture, said she agreed, adding 'I know for a fact that this is not the end for us.'
'I know that beyond any doubt in my mind, I am very solid in my faith. I know where I stand,' she said in the episode released in January 2023.
More than two years later, the Chrisleys are free thanks to a pardon from President Donald Trump, who knows a thing or two about honing a wealth-soaked image through reality television.
The couple were convicted in 2022 of conspiracy to defraud banks out of more than $30 million in loans. The 'Chrisley Knows Best' stars and their accountant, Peter Tarantino, were also convicted of several tax crimes.
Now, as they are set to resume their lives after being incarcerated and maintaining their innocence, they might have another thing to learn from the man who set them free: How to make an unlikely comeback.
But to understand where the Chrisleys might go from here, we have to understand how they got here.
By the time the Chrisleys made it to the small screen via their reality series on the USA Network, they had already endured some challenges as a family.
Todd and Julie Chrisley married in 1996, creating a blended family that consisted of two children from Todd Chrisley's previous marriage, daughter Lindsie and son Kyle. Together, they had son Chase, who was born the year they married, daughter Savannah who arrived the following year and son Grayson who was born in 2006.
In 2012, Julie Chrisley, the daughter of a Baptist minister, leaned into the strength of their family and faith after she was diagnosed with breast cancer and underwent a double masectomy as part of the treatment.
Six years later, she hailed her husband to The Tennessean for his unwavering support and shared a story of him gently undressing her in the shower to wash her hair and telling her how good she looked after her breasts had been removed.
'He never flinched,' she said at the time. 'I truly believe that moment took our relationship to a whole new level.'
They came onto the public stage on March 11, 2014 when their reality series 'Chrisley Knows Best' premiered.
Viewers of that first episode were treated to scenes of the family's affluent lifestyle in a gated community outside of Atlanta. Todd Chrisley bragged about the family spending more than $300,000 a year on their clothing (though prosecutors would later allege that the couple exaggerated their actual wealth).
While the family's sometimes cartoonish antics mostly drove the series, the role that religion played in their lives was never avoided, with discussions about faith and the Bible sometimes incorporated into storylines.
Things were not all always golden, however. As the show went on, it also featured the couple taking custody of their granddaughter Chloe as her father, Kyle Chrisley, struggled with substance abuse. In 2019, he posted on social media about the family situation.
'I haven't been the best dad to Chloe, I've had a problem with drugs, I've acted completely ridiculous and through all that, they have stood by my side,' he wrote.
In an on-screen reunion in one season of the show, Kyle Chrisley meets with his father as he tries to mend trust he's broken while struggling with addiction. The heavy conversation ends with Todd Chrisley open to the idea of his son coming back into the family's life, as long as he takes frequent drug tests. He agrees before his dad attempts to lighten the mood.
'Well, you look good…You can at least say 'Daddy, I got that from you,.'' Todd Chrisley jokes.
'Yeah, 100%. No Botox. Nothing here,' his son replies.
His dad deadpans: 'Well, now, don't be throwing shade at Botox.'
On screen, the family would also clash over Todd Chrisley's at-times overbearing rules. He would tell his daughter how to dress and admitted at one point that he hired an IT company in able to monitor everything his children and his grandchildren did in the house.
'Find your friends at school,' he famously said regarding his children. 'I'm your daddy.'
Amid it all, Todd Chrisley prided himself in being a fiercely protective father off screen, too. After then 19-year-old Savannah broke her vertebra after crashing her car into a guardrail, he denied speculation that she was texting and driving at the time of the crash, adding that he checked her phone record to confirm that.
'Listen… we can't control what people put in social media, we can't control what people do in the press,' he said. 'But you know, a tame story doesn't sell papers.'
The show's popularity proved to be such that there were spinoffs and the scrutiny that comes with heightened popularity.
'Growing Up Chrisley' premiered in 2019 and focused on siblings Chase and Savannah, but it ended in 2022 when 'Chrisley Knows Best' was also canceled following Todd and Julie Chrisley's convictions.
Todd Chrisley also hosted a variety talk series called 'According to Chrisley,' which featured individual family members and celebrity guests joining him, but only lasted a season before it was canceled.
Julie Chrisley, too, got her time to shine, hosting minisodes of a cooking series called 'What's Cooking With Julie Chrisley' for USA Network's digital platforms.
Arguably one of their most successful side hustles as the couple's podcast, 'Chrisley Confessions' on iHeart Radio. It ran for more than 200 episodes before ending when they reported to prison.
Savannah also has her own titled 'Unlocked with Savannah Chrisley.'
The podcast space has allowed the Chrisleys to open up about faith, family and rumors like they couldn't in the structure of their reality program.
In 2017, Todd Chrisley addressed speculation about his sexuality during a radio interview on 'The Domenick Nati Show,' saying that he was 'flattered that people think I can get laid on both ends.'
'In order for it to disappoint me, it would mean that I don't agree with someone being gay,' Chrisley said on the radio program, 'I don't believe that's a choice that you make. I believe that you are the way that God has made you.'
'And my wife certainly is flattered that as many men want her husband as there are women,' Chrisley added. 'With that being said, I'm never going to have a drought.'
Though Todd Chrisley in particular had a penchant for witty comebacks, the couple's federal trial was no laughing matter to the family.
The government alleged that the Chrisleys had exaggerated their TV earnings to banks and borrowed more than $30 million that they were unable to pay back.
The couple always maintained their innocence and spoke often of the faith they said was sustaining them, even after they were convicted.
Todd and Julie Chrisley broke their silence on their podcast after their convictions with Todd Chrisley telling the audience, 'I know all of you guys are wanting to know every detail that is going on in our lives, and I have to ask that you respect that we're not allowed to talk about it at the present time. There will come a time to where all of it is discussed.'
'We did want to come on today and let everyone know that it's a very sad, heartbreaking time for our family right now,' he added. 'But we still hold steadfast in our faith and we trust that God will do what he does best because God's a miracle worker and that's what we're holding out for.'
Their daughter Savannah took over the role of keeping their audience informed after Todd Chrisley began serving a 12-year sentence at the Federal Prison Camp (FPC) in Pensacola, Florida, while Julie Chrisley was sentenced to seven years and was sent to the Federal Medical Center (FMC) Lexington in Lexington, Kentucky.
She also became the caregiver of her younger brother Grayson and niece Chloe.
'It's tough when your norm is no longer your norm,' she said during an episode of her podcast in 2023. 'What I've known for 25 years, my parents are gone and it's tough. My dad is my absolute best friend and I don't get to just pick up the phone and call him.'
During a July 2023 episode of her 'Unlocked with Savannah Chrisley' podcast, she and her brother Chase discussed what he called the 'nightmare' conditions of their parents' incarceration.
'They both have no air conditioning,' he said. 'They're both in states where it gets to be 100+ degrees, and there's no air conditioning.'
Savannah Chrisley alleged that the facilities where her parents were serving their time had issues with asbestos, black mold and lead-based paint, though she expressed doubt that the general public would care.
'I mean, Chase, it is prison so we're not going to sit here and act like it should be the Four Seasons,' she said. 'It's prison, so people don't have any sympathy for it.'
A spokesperson for the the Bureau of Prisons told CNN in a statement at the time that they would not comment on 'anecdotal allegations,' adding 'for privacy, safety, and security reasons we do not comment on the conditions of confinement for any specific adult in custody (AIC) or group of AICs.'
'We can assure you all AICs have unlimited access to drinking water and the Bureau of Prisons (BOP) is monitoring the ventilation at the Federal Prison Camp (FPC) Pensacola and the Federal Medical Center (FMC) Lexington, as one of our highest priorities is the safety of BOP employees and AICs,' the statement read. 'Every BOP facility, including FPC Pensacola and FMC Lexington, has contingency plans to address a large range of concerns or incidents, including ventilation temperatures, and is fully equipped and prepared to implement these plans as necessary.'
Savannah Chrisley also turned to and was embraced by MAGA, President Trump's devoted fan base, for support. She was a passionate orator as one of the speakers at the Republican National Convention held in 2024 in Milwaukee.
'72600019, and 72601019. These may be just numbers to you, but to me, they're my whole heart.,' she said. 'These numbers are my parents' identification numbers in our federal prison system.
In her speech she attempted to tie their legal issues to those of then presidential candidate Trump, referencing 'rogue prosecutors' she said targeted them because of their fame.
'Due to our public profile and conservative beliefs, they accused my parents of fraud when really we were defrauded by a dishonest business partner who, and let's not forget, the government gave full immunity to,' said Savannah Chrisley who also campaigned for Trump as of the 'Team Trump's Women Tour.' 'We suffered warrantless rage and harassment, one of the officials even had my father's face on a dart board in his office.'
President Trump has consistently alleged that he has been unfairly targeted in legal action, including when he was found guilty of 34 charges of falsifying business records. He is the first convicted felon to be elected president of the United States.
Trump seemed to allude to a shared sense of injustice when he made an Oval Office call to Savannah Chrisley to inform her he was pardoning her parents.
'It's a terrible thing,' Trump told Chrisley. 'But it's a great thing because your parents are going to be free and clean, and hopefully we can do it by tomorrow.'
The pardons for the Chrisleys and their release Wednesday come at a propitious time as it was recently announced that the family would be the subjects of a new reality series for Lifetime.
The network's press release stated that in the new series, 'the Chrisleys don't know best anymore, but they're doing their best to be there for each other.'
It was set to focus on Savannah's life as caregiver to her siblings and her advocacy for her parents, as well as feature other extended cast members. The family's life, the network teased, 'is far different from what audiences have seen before.'
A representative for Lifetime did not have additional information about the untitled project when reached by CNN on Wednesday.
Savannah Chrisley had previously shared in 2023 that a new show was in the works and said her parents' convictions would not 'stop us from moving forward.'
If there's any crowd open to the idea of second chances, it's likely the one that has championed the Chrisleys from the start. But who really knows best?

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Savannah Chrisley Was on a Flight to Pick Up Dad Todd from Prison Within 40 Minutes of Learning of His Pardon
Savannah Chrisley Was on a Flight to Pick Up Dad Todd from Prison Within 40 Minutes of Learning of His Pardon

Yahoo

time20 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Savannah Chrisley Was on a Flight to Pick Up Dad Todd from Prison Within 40 Minutes of Learning of His Pardon

Savannah Chrisley revealed on her Unlocked podcast that she and friend Tyler Bishop hopped on a flight 'literally 40 minutes' after finding out about her parents' pardons Todd and Julie Chrisley were pardoned for financial crimes by President Donald Trump on May 27 and released from their respective prisons on May 28 Savannah told reporters that she had been waiting at the prison to pick up her father since '2 a.m.'Savannah Chrisley didn't waste a second heading to pick up her father Todd Chrisley from jail after he was pardoned by President Donald Trump. The Chrisley Knows Best star, 27, revealed on the latest episode of her Unlocked podcast that she received a head's up from a government official about when her parents, Todd and Julie Chrisley, were going to be released from prison. 'As soon as I found out that President Trump was pardoning my parents... I had someone within the administration send me a message and say, 'This could happen in two hours, five hours, we're not sure. And I was like 'Alright, I've got to go. I have to get to Florida,' ' Savannah said. 'So Tyler [Bishop] and I jumped on a flight literally 40 minutes later and headed to Pensacola,' she added. Savannah previously shared that Trump personally called her as she was 'walking into Sam's Club' to inform her of the pardons on Tuesday, May 27. She told reporters the following day that she had been waiting at the prison to pick up her father since '2 a.m. last night.' Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. The reality star shared on her podcast that it was a 'bittersweet moment' picking up her father, 56, from the Federal Prison Camp Pensacola in Florida because the last time she saw him, he was walking into the prison 'away from me.' However, this time was far different as he was 'walking out and walking toward me.' 'I think [it was] the most emotional thing I think I had ever gone through,' she recalled. 'But I was just so blessed and honored and grateful that my dad was coming home.' She shared a glimpse of her dad, as they headed home from prison in Florida, on her Instagram Stories on Thursday, May 29, and an Instagram Reel with multiple selfies of herself and her father, soundtracked by Jason Aldean's "We Back." Savannah also shared with reporters outside the prison that her brother Grayson Chrisley, 19, picked up their mother, Julie Chrisley, 52, from a separate prison in Kentucky. The Unlocked podcast host has documented their journey leading up to and following their release. The same day Julie first stepped out in public, Savannah shared the moment her mom and dad reunited in a discreet photo on her Instagram Stories with the caption: 'Reunited and it feels so good!' The couple, who have been married since 1996 and share four children, were first indicted in August 2019 before a jury found them guilty in 2022 of tax evasion and bank fraud. They were sentenced to a combined 19 years in prison, but their sentences were reduced by about two years each in September 2023. In the years since, they have been appealing their case. While Todd's appeal was upheld, Julie's was initially granted due to insufficient evidence. However, a judge later ruled that her original punishment was sufficient. Read the original article on People

‘Back to the days of land grabs': NM state lawmakers on alert against sale of public lands
‘Back to the days of land grabs': NM state lawmakers on alert against sale of public lands

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

‘Back to the days of land grabs': NM state lawmakers on alert against sale of public lands

Rep. Patricia Roybal Caballero (D-Albuquerque) attended a watch event for a court hearing in the Yazzie/Martinez education equity case on April 29, 2025. (Photo by Danielle Prokop / Source NM) Even though the Republican tax and spend bill that cleared the United States House of Representatives last month no longer authorizes the sale of thousands acres of public land, state lawmakers in New Mexico say they will continue to monitor how the federal government's actions toward public lands could impact Native nations. As the interim legislative Indian Affairs Committee on Monday planned its work for the rest of 2025 at its first meeting since this year's legislative session, two members said the U.S. government's plan to sell public lands could threaten tribal sovereignty and economic development in New Mexico, which is home to 23 Indigenous nations. Rep. Patricia Roybal Caballero, an enrolled member of the Piro Manso Tiwa Tribe and an Albuquerque Democrat, said she anticipates the federal government's sales of public lands may affect tribal sovereignty, and she wants to know what legal mechanisms are available to the state government to 'push back against those land grabs.' 'I envision us going back to the days of land grabs,' Roybal Caballero said. U.S. Rep. Gabe Vasquez (D-N.M.), who co-founded the Bipartisan Public Lands Caucus earlier this year, last month applauded the removal of a provision in the budget bill that would have authorized the sale of thousands acres of public land in Utah and Nevada. At the time, Mark Allison, executive director of conservation advocacy group New Mexico Wild, said this is the first of many fights in coming days to stave off efforts to privatize public lands. 'The same forces that tried to sneak this land grab through would love nothing more than to come after New Mexico's public lands next time,' he said. NM delegation: Three national monuments could be reduced, eliminated Rep. Charlotte Little, an Albuquerque Democrat from San Felipe Pueblo, said on Monday she wants the committee to receive a report on the impact of the federal government's proposed actions toward the Chaco Canyon and Kasha-Katuwe Tent Rocks national monuments, and how those actions could also affect economic development in the surrounding areas. New Mexico's federal delegation, led by U.S. Sen. Martin Heinrich (D-N.M.), in April asked the federal government to leave intact Tent Rocks along with Organ Mountains-Desert Peaks National Monument and Rio Grande del Norte, which they said were 'under consideration for reduction or elimination.' Roybal Caballero also said she wants the committee to discuss issues related to sustainable management of tribal lands including water rights, resource extraction and environmental protection. By the end of the year, the committee is expected to endorse legislation for the 2026 legislative session. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX

'More is more': Hakeem Jeffries pushes Democrats to flood the zone in opposition to Trump
'More is more': Hakeem Jeffries pushes Democrats to flood the zone in opposition to Trump

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

'More is more': Hakeem Jeffries pushes Democrats to flood the zone in opposition to Trump

WASHINGTON — In the chaotic opening weeks of President Donald Trump's second administration, Democrats debated whether to push back on every norm-shattering executive action, or pick and choose their spots and hope Trump would prove to be his own worst enemy. That debate has been settled, with Democrats aggressively taking on Trump in the courts, in the streets and on social media. At the center of that messaging strategy is House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., who privately has been urging his members to be more visible in their districts and on digital media, and has stepped up his own activity in recent weeks. Rather than his regular, once-a-week news conference in the Capitol, Jeffries now holds as many as three press briefings with reporters each week in Washington. He is also making weekly appearances on popular podcasts outside the traditional political media circuit, including those hosted by Stephen A. Smith, Tony Kornheiser, Jon Stewart, Katie Couric and Scott Galloway. Marking the opening months of the Trump administration, Jeffries delivered a scathing 30-minute rebuke of Trump's '100 days of chaos, 100 days of cruelty and 100 days of corrupt behavior.' He also joined Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., for a 12-hour sit-in on the Capitol steps as they protested Medicaid cuts in Trump's 'big, beautiful bill.' 'We are in a 'more is more' environment. These aren't ordinary times, and they require an extraordinary response,' Jeffries said in a phone interview with NBC News on Tuesday, one of roughly two dozen digitalmedia interviews he has participated in since February. 'House Democrats are rising to the occasion to meet the moment,' he said, 'but more from all of us will continue to be required until we can definitively end this national nightmare that Donald Trump and House Republicans are visiting on the American people.' After suffering a bruising defeat in the last presidential election and still years out from the next one, Democrats are without a clear national leader. And the party's base has displayed a hunger for a new and younger generation of voices to take charge. That has opened the door for Jeffries, 54, to assume an even bigger role in the party, even as he is still coming into national prominence and — less than three years removed from succeeding Nancy Pelosi as House Democrats' leader — not yet a household name. The flood-the-zone strategy is a marked change for a politician with a reputation for being cautious and calculated. But if that game plan pays off and Democrats manage to win control of the House in next year's midterm elections, Jeffries would be the favorite to become speaker — and the party's most powerful member in Washington. 'Hakeem Jeffries gets it. As he says, we're in an environment where more is more. We need to be flooding the zone. And not only is he doing that, he's encouraging every member of Congress to do that,' Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., an influential progressive in the party, told NBC News in an interview. 'He's meeting the moment,' Khanna added, 'and that's why I say he's, right now, the leader of the Democratic Party.' Rep. Madeleine Dean, D-Pa., also praised Jeffries, saying that 'he is out there as much as he possibly can be, while still running a caucus and trying to block horrible legislation that this administration is putting forward.' Jeffries' more aggressive approach comes as the Democratic base has demanded party leaders do more to oppose Trump amid federal layoffs, mass deportations of undocumented immigrants and scores of executive actions that have tested the balance of powers. But it's not clear to what degree Democrats' throw-everything-at-the-wall strategy is breaking through in a cacophonous political environment — one almost exclusively driven and dominated by Trump. And there are still lingering questions about whether the party's current crop of leaders and their tactics are meeting the moment. 'The strategy of quarter one and quarter two was 'let Trump implode.' But you don't win elections, saying how bad that guy is — you have to win on substance,' said one Democratic strategist, who was granted anonymity to speak candidly. Still, Jeffries has notched some key symbolic wins. In March, Jeffries unified House Democrats against a Republican-led government funding bill that included a hike to military spending and cuts to domestic spending. Only a single Democrat voted yes. By comparison, Jeffries' counterpart in the Senate, Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., faced significant blowback when he and a band of Democrats in the chamber allowed the bill to pass to avert a shutdown. As House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., tried to push through the sweeping domestic policy package before Memorial Day, Jeffries and the Democrats threw up roadblocks to make it as politically painful as possible for Republicans. More than 100 Democrats testified against the Trump bill in the Rules Committee, dragging out the meeting for nearly 22 hours and delaying the process. As they stalled, Jeffries' leadership team urged members to record videos and join livestreams to speak out against the bill, which could boot millions of Americans from Medicaid rolls and off food stamps. Jeffries said he believes Democrats' messaging is breaking through, pointing to polls showing that most Americans disapprove of the way Trump is handling the presidency and a special election victory in Wisconsin in April that allowed liberals to hold their majority on the state Supreme Court. If 'Democrats as a party are truly on the run,' Jeffries said, 'then we'd be losing special elections, not winning them in the way that we are, including most decisively in Wisconsin.' In the wake of Trump's inauguration in January, some Democrats privately grumbled that perhaps Jeffries wasn't the right man for the job. Some pined for Pelosi, who famously clashed with Trump during his first term, lecturing the president in a 2019 White House meeting and ripping up a copy of his State of the Union speech the next year. While not pointing fingers at Jeffries, other Democrats have said the party needs to clearly state what it is for — not just say it's against Trump. 'Voters are turned off by Trump, but they want to know Democrats' affirmative agenda as well,' one Democratic official said. But few Democrats have chosen to directly challenge Jeffries. Ashley Etienne, who served as a top adviser to both Pelosi and Vice President Kamala Harris, has been the exception. Etienne, appearing on a Politico podcast last month, said Trump has given Democrats a tremendous political gift and that Jeffries and other leaders were 'squandering' it. She faulted him for failing to coordinate with outside groups and other elected officials around the country. 'If you don't have coordination, you've just got words on a paper that you're calling talking points,' Etienne told Politico. 'It's meaningless. And I think that's where we are right now.' Jeffries said in his 100-day address that Democrats in the coming months would lay out a 'vision for this country's future that isn't about Donald Trump.' But on Tuesday, he declined to offer any details. Internal discussions on that blueprint are getting underway now, following the House's passage of the massive bill for Trump's agenda. 'There are a variety of issues that distinguish Democrats from Republicans. And as we emerge from the debate around the one big, ugly bill that Donald Trump and his sycophants in Congress are trying to jam down the throat of the American people,' Jeffries said Tuesday, 'we will have the opportunity to draw a clear contrast between our values-based vision for making life better for all Americans and the Republican vision that is designed to benefit their billionaire donors like Elon Musk.' And a Jeffries aide pushed back on Etienne, saying their office holds a weekly meeting with between 60 and 100 surrogates, advocates and grassroots activists, in addition to pushing out regular talking points. On Sunday, Schumer said he and Jeffries had spoken 'about ways our caucuses can fight back together' against the Trump package as the Senate considers it. In March, leaders, working closely with House Democrats' messaging arm, also set up space in the Capitol for social media influencers and advocates to rebut a speech Trump gave to a joint session of Congress. 'We need to be messaging on all mediums, for people to see what we're about,' said Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., a 35-year-old progressive star. 'As a millennial, I obviously lean on social media. I tend to participate in the mediums that I myself use,' she continued. 'I don't think that's necessarily about what is best for everybody. … I think it makes us better messengers when we are engaging on the platforms that we use ourselves.' Dean, the Pennsylvania congresswoman who served as one of the Democratic prosecutors in Trump's second impeachment trial, said each lawmaker is figuring out their own unique way to fight back against Trump. A member of the House Judiciary Committee, Dean has held seven town halls this year and said she has focused her messaging on the president's potential ethics violations, including accepting a $400 million jet from Qatar. 'The way I've said it, instead of more is more, is we can't normalize any of this stuff. … This is not normal. I don't want anybody to think that what is going on here is actually normal,' Dean said in an interview. 'The American people are really busy, but they have to be aware of these threats.' This article was originally published on

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store