Entertainment
Chrissy Teigen’s disturbing past comes back into play as John Legend’s attempt to quash false accusations backfires
John Legend, 45, apparently got involved in an internet fight between Beyoncé’s mother and right-wing provocateur Candace Owens.
Tina Knowles (70) and Owens (35) had a falling out over rumors that the singer was paid by Vice President Kamala Harris’ campaign to support the Democrats’ 2024 presidential bid for the White House.
“The lie is that Beyonce was paid $10 million to speak at a rally in Houston for Vice President Kamala Harris,” Knowles wrote in an Instagram caption.
“When in reality: Beyonce was not paid a dime to speak at presidential candidate Vice President Kamala Harris’ rally in Houston,” the Texas-born entrepreneur continued.
Knowles also shares an Instagram video, originally shared by Owens, during which she claims Beyoncé made money from Harris’ campaign, which was “flagged” and “removed” by the Meta-owned platform.
Since sharing the news about her daughter, Knowles’ post has garnered greater than 900 comments, including one from Legend, an R&B singer who performed on the 2024 Democratic National Convention in August.
“Let them know, Miss Tina! We all performed at no cost because we care in regards to the way forward for our nation,” Legend commented.
One Legend fan wrote: “We knew it sir! And thank you!!!” A like-minded follower added: “Yes! We care about America.”
Knowles replied, “I know you care deeply about this country.”
However, other Instagram users didn’t appreciate the 12-time Grammy winner’s approach to the political direction of the United States.
“Shut up, John. You are disconnected from the real world and what we are dealing with. FOH you all tried to sell us upstream,” one person stated.
Another person posted: “Said by the wife of a man who abuses teenagers and lies about abortion, (you are) a joke.”
An analogous comment read: “He cares in regards to the way forward for the nation, but his wife is most (known) for abusing children and ordering them to end their lives. The jokes write themselves here.
The legend married Sports Illustrated swimsuit model Chrissy Teigen, 38, in September 2013. The star couple has 4 children together, ages two to eight.
Teigen has an extended history of abuse allegations. In particular, reality television personality Courtney Stodden accused Legend’s wife of cyberbullying on X (then known as Twitter).
Stodden, 16, met married acting coach Doug Hutchison, 51, online before the teenager married Hutchison in May 2011.
According to CharmIn May 2021, Stodden alleged that Teigen began harassing them via direct messages regarding their marriage to the “The Green Mile” actor.
“Not only was she publicly tweeting that she wanted me to ‘take a nap,’ she was privately DMing me and telling me to kill myself,” Stodden said.
A forged member from the second season of “Couples Therapy” also claimed that Teigen told them, “I can’t wait for you two to die.”
Teigen publicly apologized for her past behavior. The “Lip Sync Battle” presenter posted a lengthy message on X expressing remorse for being an “insecure, attention-seeking troll.”
“I feel ashamed and completely ashamed of my actions, nevertheless it’s nothing compared to how Courtney felt. “I have worked so hard to bring you joy and to be loved, and the feeling of letting you down is truly unbearable,” Teigen wrote on Twitter.
She added: “I have tried to reach out to Courtney privately, but since I fueled all of this publicly, I also want to publicly apologize. I’m so sorry, Courtney. I hope you can heal now, knowing how sorry I am.”
Stodden accepted Teigen’s apology, but noted that he “has never reached out to her or her camp privately.” The long-time supporter Republican President-elect Donald Trump also suggested that Teigen’s real motives can have been to save her relationships with certain brands.
According to Page sixdepartment store chain Bloomingdale’s has discontinued Teigen’s “Cravings by Chrissy” cookware line following bad publicity about her alleged abuse.
In addition to Stodden’s accusations, the TV personality has faced more complaints from other celebrities, such as “Teen Mom” star Farrah Abraham and “Project Runway” alum Michael Costello.
However, a 2021 article from Business expert claimed that direct messages on Instagram that Costello claimed were from Teigen and allegedly called him a “racist” were likely manipulated.
Inconsistencies within the screenshots Costello posted, such as a missing verified checkmark and an incorrect profile photo, raised red flags. Legend defended his wife against this particular allegation.
In June 2021, he tweeted: “Chrissy apologized for her public tweets, but after her apology, Mr. Costello fabricated a DM exchange between them. This exchange was made up, completely false and never took place.”
Four days before Legend posted a tweet about Costello’s alleged DM fabrication, Teigan posted an essay on the subject Mediocre about her “terrible tweets” coming to light.
“I even have publicly apologized to one person, but there are others – and not only a number of – to whom I have to apologize. I’m within the means of privately contacting the people I even have offended,” Teigen wrote.
The self-proclaimed web troll added: “There is just no excuse for my previous terrible tweets. My goals didn’t deserve them. Nobody does this. Many of them needed empathy, kindness, understanding and support, not my meanness disguised as easy, sharp humor.
“The truth is that I’m now not the one who wrote those terrible things. “I grew up, I went through therapy, I got married, I had children, I went through more therapy, I experienced loss and pain, I went through more therapy and I experienced more life,” she insisted.
Teigan’s abuse scandal got here to a head in October 2021, when she was questioned about various allegations during an interview on NBC’s morning show “The Today Show.”
The Utah-born mother of 4 children talked about her Instagram post from July 2021 during which she referred to joining the so-called “cancel club” after revelations about her problematic social media activities.
“You learn a lot in moments if you lose a lot. Your world has been turned the other way up,” Teigen said. “For me, that was a giant moment where I assumed, ‘Wow, I want to work out how I can recover, how I can grow from this, learn from this.’
The former “Bring the Funny” judge also said she became a “stronger” and “better” person within the wake of the general public condemnation, which included achieving 100 days of sobriety.