logo
Kristin Cavallari accuses Craig Conover of lying about 'overlap' with Paige Desorbo after revealing how many times they had sex

Kristin Cavallari accuses Craig Conover of lying about 'overlap' with Paige Desorbo after revealing how many times they had sex

Daily Mail​12 hours ago

Kristin Cavallari met up with Craig Conover for the first time in years during her podcast tour on E! 's Honestly Cavallari: The Headline Tour, where she accused him of some 'overlap' in their hookup and his relationship with Paige DeSorbo.
The 38-year-old reality star had previously denied hooking up with the 36-year-old Summer House star back in 2022, though she recently came clean on Watch What Happens Live with Andy Cohen earlier this month.
She admitted that they were 'romantic for two seconds,' adding, 'The second I caught wind of Paige, I very politely excused myself from the situation.'
Cavallari welcomed both Conover and his Summer House co-star Austen Kroll during her Boston tour stop, where she revealed how many times they had hooked up.
Kroll also set the record straight that he and Cavallari were never romantic, but she did ask Conover about any 'overlap' in their tryst and him dating DeSorbo, who he dated from October 2021 to December 2024.
While they were discussing how they first met, Cavallari bluntly asked Conover, 'Did you lie to me about Paige?' which clearly stunned Conover.
'What?' Conover said with a weak laugh, as Kroll said, 'Kristin!' as she added, 'I definitely think there was a little overlap.'
She added, 'I remember asking you and you were like, "No, nothing's going on,' as Conover said, 'No, I don't think there's as much overlap as everyone thinks,' though clearly the audience didn't believe him judging from their reactions.
He added, 'I honestly believe, like we were such good friends,' as Kristin admitted, 'I'm not saying we were dating, we weren't dating.'
'I actually am an honest person, like I never lied to you about anything,' Craig admitted, adding, 'Eventually, it just got to the point Paige and I decided to date and we stopped talking.'
Kristin admitted, 'Once I kind of caught wind of Paige, I was like, I'm gonna remove myself from this situation.'
She did confirm in a confession that there was, 'more than kissing' going on with Craig, as she confirmed more in a flashback.
During a flashback, Kristin's BFF Justin Anderson asked if her vagina is safe and she fired back with, 'Ask Craig.'
'How many times did I hook up with Craig? I think it was honestly like once or twice. It wasn't that much,' she said.
She added, 'I remember asking you and you were like, "No, nothing's going on,' as Conover said, 'No, I don't think there's as much overlap as everyone thinks,' though clearly the audience didn't believe him judging from their reactions
They played a drinking game and she was dared to kiss Craig but he slyly told her he was dating someone and they didn't kiss.
After Craig and Austen left the stage, Craig said, 'This is about the dumbest thing that I've ever done in my life. The whole f***ing thing was Paige. That was crazy.'
When Kristin joined them backstage, Craig said, 'Kristin, if I wasn't dating someone, I would have kissed you on stage, but I was like, no one knows I'm dating someone,' he said of his girlfriend Natalie Buffett.
She did admit that all of the drama swirling around her and Craig was a 'wake-up call,' adding, 'It definitely made me kind of take a step back and realize that I kind of needed to reel things in a little bit.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Gogglebox star slams ‘exploitative' show saying she LIED to quit it and made no money
Gogglebox star slams ‘exploitative' show saying she LIED to quit it and made no money

The Sun

time37 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Gogglebox star slams ‘exploitative' show saying she LIED to quit it and made no money

FORMER Gogglebox star Rev Kate Bottley has slammed the "exploitative" show, saying she LIED to quit it and made no money. Kate, 50, who now presents on BBC Radio 2, revealed she gave a fake excuse to step away from the hit Channel 4 series - but had no intention of ever coming back. 4 The Church of England vicar, who appeared on Gogglebox with her husband Graham for five series until 2016, said signing up for the show ended up damaging her family's home life. She alleged it left her children isolated, meal times disrupted, and their modest fee swallowed up by hidden costs. Speaking on the Walking the Dog podcast, Kate said: 'I wish I'd known how much it took over our life for two and a half years. It's reality TV, it's by its nature consensual exploitation.' The journalist said she originally agreed to take part in a bid to change how people of faith were portrayed on screen - but soon found the filming schedule was 'quite intrusive'. Her son Arthur, who she described as on the 'autistic spectrum', and daughter Ruby, then still in school, would hide away in their rooms twice a week while a large production crew set up in the family home. She continued: 'My kids spent two-and-a-half years sat in their bedrooms every Tuesday and Thursday night or whatever nights they came to film. 'My kids didn't have friends round for a lot [of the time], didn't have help with their homework. Things like that.' Meal times also took a hit, with Kate adding: 'I'm married to a man who won't eat takeaways, and I don't want to be filmed eating on camera so I was like, 'No, I'll cook.' There were casseroles and chillis.' She added: 'They paid, but I cooked two nights a week for the crew… all the money we got from it went on the electricity, the internet connection that they were using, and the food and being hospitable to six people in my home two nights a week. "It's a vicarage as well, I should be hospitable. We should be sharing our home to people, and eating food together. Inside Gogglebox star Rev Kate Bottley's home with hot tub in the garden - including the bits you never see on camera "It was a good two and a half years but we couldn't have done any more. It got to the point where we were just a bit overwhelmed." Kate said she was first approached to take part after a 2013 video of her dancing down the aisle to Kool & the Gang's Celebration at a wedding she officiated went viral. It clocked more than eight million views on YouTube and caught the attention of Channel 4, who signed her and Graham up the following year. The pair were a hit with audiences, but Kate's confident personality drew online criticism from some viewers. She recalled: 'We used to get that whole 'Oh, you never let your husband speak.' It was like, 'Wow.' Be careful there, your misogyny's showing. 'Of course if you're a confident woman married to a quieter man he must be henpecked, and he must be bossed about - it's not that he's just naturally quieter. In any relationship there's someone that is more outgoing.' She said that while she and Graham were paid, the fee was small - and worse, being tied into the show stopped her from taking up better-paid offers elsewhere. She said: 'As well as finding the modest amount of money we were paid disappearing. There was stuff coming in that I wanted to have a go at that I just wasn't able contractually to do.' Offers from major entertainment shows like Would I Lie To You? were off the table due to the show's strict exclusivity clause. Kate said: 'There's quite tight exclusivity, and rightly so. Because if you're filming ordinary people sat on their sofa watching TV you can't then have those people on the TV. It sort of breaks the fourth wall too much.' Eventually, the family decided to walk away from Gogglebox, but not before offering viewers a cover story. She said: 'It so happened that it came around the time that Ruby was doing her GCSEs so the excuse we gave was, 'We're going to take some time away while she does her exams.' But we were just a bit overwhelmed.' Despite her experience, Kate credits the show with boosting her public profile. Since quitting, she's become a regular on Songs of Praise and built a successful career in radio and television, while husband Graham returned to teaching music. Speaking of her decision to go on Gogglebox, Kate previously told The Sun: "We wanted to show people that just because we have a faith and are Christians, it doesn't mean we are four-headed. Kate met her husband Graham at school when both were aged 13 years old but didn't begin dating until they were 18. Since her rise to fame. she has put her culinary skills under the microscope on Celebrity MasterChef. She has also presented the BBC's Songs of Praise. 4 4 4

Eminem's daughter Hailie Jade reveals his secret 'struggle'
Eminem's daughter Hailie Jade reveals his secret 'struggle'

Daily Mail​

time41 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Eminem's daughter Hailie Jade reveals his secret 'struggle'

Eminem's daughter, Hailie Jade McClintock, revealed that her father privately struggled with raising his children in the spotlight. Just two months after welcoming her first child, a baby boy named Elliot Marshall McClintock, with husband Evan McClintock, the influencer, 29, opened up about relating to her dad more than ever. 'Having been in the spotlight for so long, I've learned the importance of balancing what I share publicly with what I keep private,' the Just a Little Shady podcast host told People. She continued: 'Over time, I've come to understand the struggle my father faced — wanting to protect our privacy while also feeling proud and wanting to celebrate his kids.' As a parent herself now, the Michigan State College graduate explained she has mixed feelings about exposing her child to fame. 'I feel the same way now,' Hailie said. 'I want to share the proud, joyful moments that mean a lot to me, especially as a parent, but I'm also intentional about keeping certain parts of our lives just for us.' For now, she's working on 'about finding that balance between openness and privacy' and her career as a content creator. 'That balance has become even more important to me as I navigate parenthood,' she stressed. Hailie is one of three of Eminem's adult children, who he shares with ex-wife, Kim Scott. The former couple also share Alaina Marie Scott, 32, and Stevie Laine Scott, 23. On March 14, 2025, Hailie welcomed her little boy, a year after walking down the aisle. Hailie announced she was expecting in her dad's music video for Temporary (feat. Skylar Grey), which included footage of him walking her down the aisle and the moment she told him of his pregnancy. Toward the end of the video, Hailie could be seen gifting her father a Detroit Lions jersey, which had 'Grandpa' written across the back as well as an ultrasound picture of her baby-to-be. As he processed the news, the 15-time Grammy winner looked shocked as he did a double take of the ultrasound image as Hailie giggled by his side. 'Having been in the spotlight for so long, I've learned the importance of balancing what I share publicly with what I keep private,' the Just a Little Shady podcast host told People The exciting update came just five months after Scott and McClintock tied the knot in Battle Creek, Michigan. They invited close friends and family to watch them exchange vows in a 'modestly sized' ceremony held at the Greencrest Manor, according to TMZ. For her big day, Hailie wore a gorgeous white wedding dress complete with romantic tulle skirt with sheer veil topping off her elegant hairstyle. Hailie and Evans have been dating since 2016 and became engaged in February 2023. Hailie works as an influencer. She grew up in Detroit with dad Eminem - real name Marshall Bruce Mathers III - and mom Kim Scott. She studied at Chippewa Valley High School (2014) and Michigan State University. Hailie studied psychology at Michigan State University. In August, Hailie admitted on her podcast Just A Little Shady that her father's tracks, Temporary and Somebody Save Me, make her 'cry every time' she hears them. In Somebody Save Me, Eminem raps: 'Sorry that I chose drugs and put 'em above you / Sorry that I didn't love you enough to give 'em up.' In the video, footage from Hailie's childhood with her siblings flash by as Eminem watches them. Eminem raps: 'Hailey, I'm so sorry I wasn't there for your first guitar recital,' he raps as she's shown playing a pink acoustic guitar as a teen. In the song lyrics, he also shares his regrets about not walking her 'down the aisle' when she got married and missing the birth of her first child, which are things he would have missed had he died during his 2007 overdose. Eminem, who battled prescription pill addiction in the past, has been sober for 16 years. She continued, 'Between that and Temporary, I mean, I can't. I audibly sobbed I think for both songs but especially Temporary. The Slim Shady artist dedicated Temporary to his daughter and addresses his eventual death in the song and urges her to move on from it and be happy.

Did The Simpsons really just kill off a major character?
Did The Simpsons really just kill off a major character?

The Guardian

time41 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Did The Simpsons really just kill off a major character?

The Simpsons is getting experimental in its old age. With 36 seasons complete and a renewal through a 40th secured, the show has entered territory previously occupied mostly by non-prime-time stalwarts like Saturday Night Live and Meet the Press – television institutions that run for much longer than the typical sitcom or drama. Perhaps conscious that the animated comedy has now lasted five to 10 times longer than a normal sitcom, the 36th season has repeatedly toyed with the idea of what a series finale might look like, even though no such thing is anywhere in sight. For the season's premiere back in the fall, it created a fake series finale, hosted by Conan O'Brien, that featured forever-10-year-old Bart turning 11 and reacting badly to a number of finale-style abrupt changes to the status quo. And in the last episode of season 36, Estranger Things, the show flashed forward to a future where family matriarch Marge has passed away and a gradual estrangement has developed between now-adult Bart and Lisa. (Homer remains alive, with the show repeatedly underlining how unlikely it seems that he would outlive his patient, cautious and seemingly healthy spouse.) As fans caught up with the season on streaming, the finale has created a mild headline-generating controversy over whether Marge is 'really' dead, most likely among less consistent viewers who might dip back in occasionally (or get their news about the show from the internet, rather than watching it). Of course, she's not; Estranger Things is one of many flash-forward episodes the show has done over the years, generally understood to be alternate versions of the future, not pieces of a vast and interconnected timeline. The show's flashbacks are similarly intentionally contradictory; early on, Marge and Homer were young parents in the 1980s; as the show got older and they stayed the same age, subsequent flashbacks were brought further and further into the timeline. None of this makes headline news, even on a slow entertainment day. But one reason 'Marge is dead' has seemingly caught fire as an internet curiosity may have to do with the unexpectedly mortality creeping in around the edge of the show. Anyone who has watched The Simpsons in recent years, especially if they've seen a new episode juxtaposed with an older one, would have to take note of how different the characters sound. Animation may be able to preserve a character's basic look and inure them from ageing (apart from the shifts in animation technique that present subtle changes in design or movement). Animation still can't defeat, however, what the show once called the ravages of time. The Simpsons has employed a core of voice actors for nearly four decades, and who among us sound precisely the same as we did 40 years ago, if we're so lucky to have that comparison point? Marge is the character where this is most noticeable – more so than characters whose voices have been replaced by new actors for reasons of racial sensitivity. (This just means that Black actors now play Black characters, and so on.) Those newer performers bring their own style to the character, however subtle the change. But Julie Kavner, the distinctive actor who has given one of the great long-term voiceover performances of TV history, turns 75 this year, while Marge is forever on the cusp of 40. Certain line readings will sound very close to the 'original' Marge voice. More often, though, we're getting a raspier, scratchier version that sounds more like Marge's occasionally seen mother (also voiced by Kavner in a more whispery register). Harry Shearer, who voices more than a dozen major supporting characters including Mr Burns, Principal Skinner and Ned Flanders, also sounds deeper and older in recent years. That's all on top of the show's creative changes – some of which have been quite good. Under showrunner Matt Selman, the show has upped its game in recent years, actively pursuing more ambitious, format-challenging and emotionally resonant stories. Not all of them are golden-years-level funny. (Few episodes of anything are.) But the creators feel engaged with their institution, and sometimes they've even taken advantage of the modified vocals; in one recent holiday episode, Ned Flanders sounded genuinely grief-stricken in part due to Shearer's inability to hit the higher range of his usual tone. Even when the actors' changes do sound jarring, obviously it's not anyone's fault. People age – and IP, at least lately, seems to insist on defying that process, creating a difficult-to-resolve conflict. The show obviously isn't ever going to permanently kill off any of the family members, but at some point, they may be in the position of hiring someone new to voice Marge, or augmenting the performance with AI. The finale already introduced a new voice for Bart's best friend Milhouse, following the retirement of longtime voice artist Pamela Hayden. She reasonably concluded that continuing to play a 10-year-old boy well into her 70s wouldn't make much sense. Maybe that's why the most poignant element of Estranger Things isn't the death of Marge, which is handled lightly, avoiding the immediate devastation of grief with just a brief cursory shot of her funeral, and ending the episode with a short scene of her happily looking down upon her family from heaven, where she clinches with longtime crush Ringo Starr. Rather, the emotional core of the episode is the sequence in which Bart and Lisa abruptly grow out of their beloved Itchy and Scratchy cartoons after realizing the show is now also marketed toward babies, with cutesy versions of the characters adorning little sister Maggie's pyjamas. In true Simpsons fashion, this is also the funniest passage of the episode, with spot-on observations about marketing, kids' shifting tastes in popular culture and defensiveness about liking stuff that's for 'babies', complete with a spoof of a memorably emotional scene from Toy Story 2. Despite the show's jokes, the idea of the Bart/Lisa bond breaking over Itchy and Scratchy, and Marge's distress over it, is a potent one, maybe because it's precisely the kind of uncharacteristic change alluded to in the season premiere. The Simpsons has been lampshading its ability to reset its characters for decades at this point; that's the connective tissue between its heritage as a sitcom from another age, and as a cartoon across the ages. In Estranger Things, it's depicting a natural process less seismic but no less constant than death: letting go of once-beloved media and the real-world habits that accompany it. Plenty of fans will have the opportunity to let go of The Simpsons, whether by chance or by choice. The show itself, good as it sometimes is, can only play at that farewell process, experimenting with what-ifs typically subsumed into the status quo. I'm not personally eager for the show to end; my daughter still eagerly watches it, and that brought me back into the newer episodes. But there does seem to be a denial of impermanence, maybe even some frustration with that, under the show's surface. The real question isn't whether Marge Simpson will live on, but how long the show will keep contemplating endings it can't have.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store