logo
Stephen ‘Twitch' Boss' family mulling legal action against widow Allison Holker

Stephen ‘Twitch' Boss' family mulling legal action against widow Allison Holker

Yahoo13-02-2025

The family of Stephen 'Twitch' Boss are gearing up to take legal action against his widow, Allison Holker, over claims she has made about the late DJ since his death by suicide in December 2022.
The public feud was sparked by the release Holker's memoir, 'This Far: My Story of Love, Loss, and Embracing the Light,' earlier this month. It contains no shortage of bombshell allegations about the former 'Ellen DeGeneres Show' producer, including that he struggled with substance abuse.
In a statement shared on Instagram, Boss' family said they were 'completely appalled by the misleading accounts and inconsistencies in Allison's book.' They added that they have 'repeatedly shown compassion toward Allison despite her disrespectful and evasive actions,' and went on to accuse her of trying to 'reshape' Boss' 'story into a narrative that aligns with her perspective.
'Stephen does not deserve this treatment, in life or death, and her accounts cause us to doubt everything she has uttered publicly and privately,' the family continued.
'Due to the unproven statements published in Allison's memoir, we have decided to seek legal counsel to examine this matter,' they concluded. 'There are a lot of unanswered questions and we want answers.'
The family also said Holker — who shares kids Weslie, 16, Maddox, 8, and Zaia, 6, with Boss — caused 'unnecessary hurt' through allegations made in wake of the TV personality's death.
In her memoir, Holker acknowledged knowing about her husband's marijuana use, but said she 'had no idea that Stephen was in an almost constant state of being high.' She also recalled going through his things after his suicide, which is how she uncovered a 'cornucopia of drugs' in his closet.
'What I found was a lot more than shoes,' she wrote. 'There were ziplocked bags of psychedelic mushrooms—some of the bags were full; some were half-empty; a few contained only one or two mushrooms. There were other substances that I had to look up on my phone.'
According to Boss' autopsy, there were not drugs in his system at the time of his death. He was 40 years old.
Boss' mother, Connie Boss, in an interview earlier this week disputed the claim that her son had been abusing drugs.
'I don't believe that there was that type of issue, that type of problem,' Connie said on CBS. 'And don't get me wrong, I applaud speaking about mental health awareness, 'cause of course, there was something going on there at the end that we're not aware of.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Paramount controlling shareholder Shari Redstone diagnosed with thyroid cancer
Paramount controlling shareholder Shari Redstone diagnosed with thyroid cancer

Fox News

time17 minutes ago

  • Fox News

Paramount controlling shareholder Shari Redstone diagnosed with thyroid cancer

Media mogul Shari Redstone, CBS parent Paramount's controlling shareholder, has been diagnosed with thyroid cancer. "Shari Redstone was diagnosed with thyroid cancer earlier this spring. While it has been a challenging period, she is maintaining all professional and philanthropic activities throughout her treatment, which is ongoing. She and her family are grateful that her prognosis is excellent," Redstone's spokesperson told Fox News Digital. The 71-year-old has frequently been in the news this year as she seeks the Trump administration's approval of a multibillion-dollar planned merger with Skydance Media and has given lawyers the green light to settle President Donald Trump's election interference lawsuit against CBS News, although no deal has been reached. Redstone wanted the opinion of doctors "about two months ago after experiencing fatigue and other symptoms," according to The New York Times, which first reported the diagnosis. She underwent surgery in May. The Times noted that she was quickly diagnosed and surgeons removed her thyroid gland but were unable to remove all the cancer cells because they'd spread to her vocal cords. Redstone controls more than three-quarters of Paramount's Class A voting shares through National Amusements, the company she took control of in 2016 when her media mogul father, Sumner Redstone, was deemed too incapacitated to run the company. He died in 2020. Redstone, who recused herself from settlement discussions related to the Trump lawsuit in February, isn't thrilled with being tied up in litigation with the sitting president and wants to get things resolved. Fox News Digital confirmed last week that Trump rejected a $15 million offer to settle his lawsuit. The talks are ongoing, but the president's legal team is demanding at least $25 million and an apology from CBS News. Many industry insiders believe the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) will wait until the lawsuit is in the rearview mirror before deciding if the planned merger with Skydance Media will be approved. Redstone is set for a significant windfall if she's able to flip Paramount to Skydance. Bloomberg reported last year that she would receive $180 million in severance on top of the roughly $350 million she would pocket from the merger. Skydance Media CEO David Ellison, who would take control of CBS as head of the newly formed Paramount Skydance Corp. if the merger is finalized, was aware of Redstone's cancer diagnosis, according to the Times.

George Clooney Previews Saturday's Live Telecast Of ‘Good Night, And Good Luck' on CNN: 'Some Networks Aren't Really Up For Doing This Right Now'
George Clooney Previews Saturday's Live Telecast Of ‘Good Night, And Good Luck' on CNN: 'Some Networks Aren't Really Up For Doing This Right Now'

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

George Clooney Previews Saturday's Live Telecast Of ‘Good Night, And Good Luck' on CNN: 'Some Networks Aren't Really Up For Doing This Right Now'

Decades before CNN agreed to a live telecast of Broadway's Good Night, and Good Luck on June 7, George Clooney had originally envisioned it as a special for CBS, not a movie for theaters and a play on Broadway. 'But then there was that mishap with Janet Jackson and Justin Timberlake at the Super Bowl,' recalls Clooney to Deadline. 'And suddenly I got a call from the head of CBS saying, 'we're out of the live TV business.' So we wrote it as a movie.' More from Deadline 'Good Night, And Good Luck's Penultimate Performance On Broadway To Air Live On CNN 'Good Night, And Good Luck' Starring George Clooney Recoups $9.5 Million Broadway Investment Biden Blasts Trump Over "False" Claims That Aides Ran Country During His Presidency; Current POTUS Admits He Has No Proof For Allegation - Update Clooney's vision has finally come full circle. For the penultimate performance of Good Night, and Good Luck — which opened in April and has since become the highest-grossing production in the history of the Shubert Organization — Broadway's Winter Garden Theatre will be equipped with 21 cameras for the live broadcast that's set to kick off at 7 p.m. ET Saturday on CNN and CNN International. It will also stream live on and via CNN's apps on connected TVs and mobile devices, without requiring a cable login, as well as on Max across all subscription plans. 'This is just the natural gestation,' says Clooney of Good Night, and Good Luck's trajectory from a 2005 film to a first-ever live telecast of a Broadway play. 'Obviously some of the networks aren't really up for the idea of doing this right now. I think they're all a little shellshocked from tariff talk and lawsuits and everything else.' That's where Warner Bros Discovery came in. In early May, Clooney called CEO David Zaslav about finding the right platform for the play that recently received five Tony Award nominations, including Best Performance by a Leading Actor in a Play for Clooney. 'I have a little bit of a history with doing live television,' says Clooney. 'I talked NBC into doing ER as a live show, and then I did a live movie called Fail Safe for CBS. Saturday is a good night for us because it's our last evening performance. Our run is over so it's not costing the play anything anymore. Why don't we open it up and show people how fun it is to come to New York to see a play?' CNN anchors Anderson Cooper and Pamela Brown will lead special live coverage that begins at 6:30 pm ET outside of the Winter Garden Theatre. Immediately following the broadcast, Cooper will host an exclusive special to discuss the production and state of global journalism. Den of Thieves is producing the live show. Executive producers are Clooney, Grant Heslov, Deena Katz, Jeff Skoll and Todd Wagner, as well as Jesse Ignjatovic, Evan Prager and Barb Bialkowski. The plan isn't to infringe on the audience who bought tickets a long time ago, insists Clooney. Cameras with long lenses will be perched in the back of the house while others will be hidden in speakers and TV monitors so viewers can get up close and personal shots of the action. 'We're not re-blocking the play,' says Clooney of the drama that he co-wrote with Heslov, who will serve as co-director of the telecast with Micah Bickham. 'We made this play from a movie. We don't need to do another movie. We're not doing that kind of coverage. It's still a play and we want people to see the audience and we want people to see big wider shots, to see how sets are changing and then to get in closer. So it's a bit of everything. We want it to feel like a very unique theater experience.' The only instructions for the theater audience that night will be to get their butts in the seats before curtain. 'It's going to get a little ugly if you come walking in once the show starts. There are no commercial breaks or anything,' says Clooney. 'It's a funny thing that happens in a live show. I remember the Obamas were here the other day and everybody was so excited. The play was four minutes shorter than it normally is. So I expect having done live television before with ER and with Fail Safe, I expect the show will pick up a little pace. But we'll get into a groove.' If there's one message that Clooney hopes to get across to viewers, it's the importance of a free press and speaking truth to power — one of the key tenets of the Clooney Foundation for Justice that the actor has run with his wife, Amal, since 2016. 'Murrow was taking on McCarthy at a time when people were afraid. And you could see fear permeating in the law firms and in the networks and in the universities,' says Clooney. 'It's a good thing to remind ourselves that we've been afraid before and we survive these things and we will get through it. The most important thing you can do is to constantly challenge people in power. You have to or they win.' Good Night, and Good Luck closes its theatrical run with a matinee performance on Sunday, June 8. There is talk about taking the show to London — which Clooney addressed recently on Late Night with Seth Meyers — but it doesn't sound like the actor plans to keep his hair tinted black for a new run across the pond. 'We have a home there and it might be fun to do something in London, but I think there should be someone else involved in it first and then maybe I could come in for a while afterwards,' he tells Deadline. 'It's fun to see other people take a turn with it to see what they do with it.' Until then, he's sorry to say goodbye to Broadway but is looking forward to putting his feet up and getting back to normal. 'I feel very lucky to be part of the person giving that message out, and I will miss that terribly,' he says. 'But I'm ready to grow some gray hair out, that's for sure.' Best of Deadline 2025 TV Series Renewals: Photo Gallery 2025 TV Cancellations: Photo Gallery 'Stick' Soundtrack: All The Songs You'll Hear In The Apple TV+ Golf Series

‘Big Bang Theory' star Kunal Nayyar gets candid on if he'd be open to a reboot
‘Big Bang Theory' star Kunal Nayyar gets candid on if he'd be open to a reboot

New York Post

time2 hours ago

  • New York Post

‘Big Bang Theory' star Kunal Nayyar gets candid on if he'd be open to a reboot

We'd love to put this plan into motion. After starring as astrophysicist Raj in 'The Big Bang Theory' for 12 seasons from 2007 to 2019, Kunal Nayyar would love to get the gang back together. But, it might be too soon to be shouting 'Bazinga!' just yet. 12 Kunal Nayyar attends the 'South Asians at the Oscars' Pre-Oscars Party. Getty Images for A-Game Public Relations 'First of all, I would be game because I'd love to spend more time with people who are my family,' Nayyar, 44. 'But look, we only ended in 2019. I'm not sure you're legally allowed to have a reunion. What? Six years after the show ends!' 'I think that would obviously have to mature a little bit,' the 'A.J. Fikry' alum continued. 'Even though the show ended in 2019, it's still on every single day, so it feels like even though the show is over, it's still on. So I think some time would have to pass, and hopefully, if I'm not too old to wear a t-shirt or a sweater vest, yes, I would love to come back on.' The CBS sitcom followed a group of best friends and roommates and also starred Kaley Cuoco as Penny, Jim Parsons as Sheldon Cooper, Johnny Galecki as Leonard Hofstadter, Simon Helberg as Howard Wolowitz, and Mayim Bialik as Amy Farrah Fowler. 12 Kunal Nayyar and Simon Helberg on 'The Big Bang Theory.' ©CBS/Courtesy Everett Collection When the show went off air, fans weren't completely out of the 'Big Bang' universe, as the spinoff 'Young Sheldon' started in 2017, which followed Sheldon Cooper growing up in East Texas. 'There is an entire generation of people who are watching 'Young Sheldon' for the first time, and then they realize there is an entire 12 years of a show after 'Young Sheldon,' so it's the greatest gift,' Nayyar gushed, 'and it was one of the greatest periods of our life, and we are all so lucky to have lived it.' If the network were to get the cast back together for one more hoorah, the actor knows exactly what the close-knit friend group would be up to. 12 Beth Behrs, Kunal Nayyar on 'Big Bang Theory.' ©CBS/Courtesy Everett Collection / Everett Collection 'I think we would just be sitting on the couch eating Chinese food like we always have. That's the family, and the family always stays together,' the actor told The Post. Looking back at his time on set, the comedian admitted that it was hard to stay in character while dealing with a room full of hilarious stars. And one funny man, in particular, is to blame. 'You know, Simon Helberg, who played Wolowitz, is still the funniest human to have ever lived,' Nayyar stated. 'Any time I'm in a scene with him, he would just do something that would set me off. I'm not sure I was pissing them off, but we show up in front of a live audience. You have to get it right. You can't mess around. I was quite embarrassed because I would always break, and I would wait for the camera to turn to the other actor, and then I would break and come back.' 12 Nathan Fillion, Johnny Galecki, Kunal Nayyar on the CBS sitcom. ©CBS/Courtesy Everett Collection 'But I was terrible so I'm apologizing to everyone,' he added. 'We were very lucky to have a really loving and happy set for 12 years.' These days, the 'Criminal: UK' star is still in touch with 'everyone,' explaining that their bond is one for the books. 'You can't go through a run like that without being [close],' confessed Nayyar. 'I spent more time with them than I did with my actual family. So I'm in touch with everyone. We are all still very close.' 12 'The Big Bang Theory.' ©CBS/Courtesy Everett Collection / Everett Collection Although, don't expect this cast to have a text chain. 'It's individual text,' Nayyar teased, 'I have like 70 family group chats, so no more group chats!' Over the years, the tech creator has taken on a variety of roles but has one genre in mind that he'd be open to exploring next. 'I would love to do true crime detective, badass kind of work,' revealed Nayyar. 'Just to explore that world, obviously, because I played one specific character on television for so long. I did a TV show on Netflix called 'Criminal: UK.' I got nominated for a BAFTA for that. I did a show for Apple called 'Suspicion.' I did a movie called 'A.J. Fikry.' Predominantly, mostly dramatic work, but it's something different and nice to explore.' 12 Laura Spencer, Kunal Nayyar in 'The Big Bang Theory.' ©CBS/Courtesy Everett Collection Nayyar also shared who his dream co-star would be, although he couldn't pick just one. 'If Philip Seymour Hoffman were alive, he'd be my greatest guest star of all time,' Nayyar detailed. 'I love Jeffrey Wright, Tom Hanks, all the classic actors who I really, really look up to. I would love to work opposite of.' Along with being a seasoned actor, Nayyar is proving he's more like his on-screen character than some may think, having created the new app IQ121 (pronounced IQ One-Two-One). 'I think all of us actors will admit that we bring aspects of our personality to all the characters we play,' Nayyar said about playing Raj. 'If that means a part of me is nerdy, I am happy to accept it.' 12 Kunal Nayyar's new app designed to help individuals, families and professionals organize, manage and safely store essential life documents and digital assets. 12 Kunal Nayyer in season 2 of 'Criminal: UK.' ©Netflix/Courtesy Everett Collection 12 Kunal Nayyar in 'Criminal: UK.' ©Netflix/Courtesy Everett Collection 'Biggest similarities, there are quite a few, obviously,' he expanded. 'Obviously, we are very different in real life. I have no issues talking to women. I've been married a long time now, but there are a lot of similarities. I am obsessed with 'Star Wars,' I am a big comic book nerd; there are many ways in which we are similar, and of course, there are many ways in which we are different.' When it comes to putting his all into this work, as long as their is a creative outlet involved that he's passionate about – Nayyar is all in. 'I don't really differentiate between creating an app or acting – for me, it's all a creative process,' he shared. 'I love the idea of creating this app, and I love the idea of being on set and shooting a movie or shooting a TV series, so I don't think there is one or another. I feel, in my heart, I am going to do it with the purest energy I can.' 12 Kunal Nayyar in 'The Storied Life of AJ Fikry.' Vertical Entertainment 12 Kunal Nayyar. Vertical Entertainment Nayyar's new app, meanwhile, was created while he was on a flight from London to Los Angeles, thinking of all the info he needed to get his parents before he booked their trip. 'IQ121 was actually born because I live between Los Angeles, London and New Delhi, and I have family scattered all over the world,' he explained. 'And every time I needed to book a flight for my parents to come visit me, it's like, 'Can you please scan your passport? Can I get your license? I've got to fill this out. So, I was like, why don't we have one place, a digital storehouse for the family, where we can create a place that is safe and encrypted for us to share sensitive documents.' In this day and age of technology, it's more important than ever to have a safe and easy space to access and share documents, as well as pictures and personal information. 12 Kunal Nayyar attends the Royal Film Performance and Global Premiere of 'Gladiator II.' Getty Images for Paramount Pictures 'That is sort of how this came together,' he added. 'For me, it was more out of a necessity. I was like we need to create something so families scattered all over the world [can access it]. This is exactly why I created this and why it's very important for our times.' Nayyar hopes users will use IQ121 for years to come for a multitude of reasons. 'It's not just a digital storehouse for sensitive, familial documents; it's also a place [where] you can upload photographs and memories. I hope ultimately it becomes a digital file you can then hand down to generations in the family.'

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