Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Monica Lewinsky Threw Some Subtle Shade After Jennifer Aniston Called Her 'Famous For Nothing'

Monica Lewinsky Threw Some Subtle Shade After Jennifer Aniston Called Her 'Famous For Nothing'
Noam Galai/Getty Images; Dave J Hogan/Getty Images

Jennifer Aniston recently lamented about people who are "famous for basically doing nothing" but still have incredible careers and how they were "diluting the job of an actor."

In a sit down interview with for Variety Actors on Actors, Aniston discussed fame and what it looks like now versus what it looked like when her career first started.


She and Pam and Tommy's Sebastian Stan discussed Pamela Anderson and Tommy Lee's stolen sex tape.

Aniston said:

"It really shaped so much of a new culture—this thing of people becoming famous for basically doing nothing but yet having these incredible careers."

She added:

"And then women’s reputation … I mean—Pam, Paris Hilton."

The video was edited to end her comment there, but the interview transcript shows another name mentioned.

Pay attention around the 9 minute mark.

youtu.be

The statement was problematic enough in the edited version considering both of those women were victims of literal crimes when intimate tapes were stolen and they were blackmailed and slut shamed.

But the transcribed conversation mentions another name—Monica Lewinsky.

The transcription quotes Aniston saying:

"This thing of people becoming famous for basically doing nothing. I mean—Pam, Paris Hilton, Monica Lewinsky, all those."

Lewinsky, another woman who was thrust into the public eye during a scandal, was an intern working for one of the most powerful men in the world when she was coerced into a sexual relationship with him.

In 2022 we would zero in on that man's targeted behavior as inappropriate. We understand the imbalanced power dynamic and how it impacts consent.

But this was 1998 and that powerful man was President Clinton, so Monica Lewinsky became a punchline instead. At least for a bit.

Like we said, it's 2022 now. People know better and speak up more.

The conversation around Lewinsky now looks more like this:

It's that exact tweet, actually, that Lewinsky used to subtly respond to Aniston calling out three women who became public figures after being violated as "famous for doing nothing."

Lewinsky didn't respond.

She didn't retweet.

She didn't screenshot it and share it on her Insta-stories or anything dramatic like that.

Monica Lewinsky just liked it.

She didn't have to do the heavy lifting on this one since Twitter was already dragging Jennifer Aniston for it anyway.

There are quite a few points in the interview where Aniston mentions the old ways, how things were done before, etc. Anistons parents were both actors, which is how she got her start in the industry.

So between the derisive tone about victims, lamenting the privilege and exclusivity of her youth, and complaining about them "diluting the job of actors" when many of her examples don't even act ... yeah ...

The dragging was real.






Neither Aniston nor Lewinsky has spoken further on it, nor has Variety explained why they chose to edit out Lewinsky's name from the video clip but left it in the article.

Pamela Anderson and Paris Hilton have not responded yet either.

More from Trending

Lynda Carter; Screenshot of Donald Trump
Stephane Cardinale/Corbis via Getty Images; Newsmax

Lynda Carter Hilariously Channels Wonder Woman In Response To Trump's Claim About 'Undetectable' Planes

After President Donald Trump touted the U.S. military's "stealth" planes that he described as "undetectable," Wonder Woman star Lynda Carter responded to his claim with a funny quip sure to delight fans of her iconic character.

Earlier, Trump boasted about the military's capabilities in remarks to reporters in the Oval Office amid heightened concerns about the ongoing Israel-Iran conflict that is sending shockwaves throughout the Middle East and around the world:

Keep ReadingShow less
red flag with pole on seashore
Seoyeon Choi on Unsplash

People Break Down The 'Silent Red Flags' Folks Tend To Ignore In Relationships

A red flag has come to mean any warning sign in life, in addition to the literal red flags that are placed on beaches or industrial sites to warn people of danger.

People will respond to situations by saying, "That’s a red flag." But before that language evolved, they'd just call them "warning signs."

Keep ReadingShow less
Ted Cruz; Tucker Carlson
The Tucker Carlson Show

Tucker Carlson And Ted Cruz Get Into Shouting Match Over Iran In Bonkers Interview Clip

Texas Republican Senator Ted Cruz—a harsh Donald Trump critic-turned-MAGA minion—sat down with fired Fox News personality Tucker Carlson for the conservative influencer's self-produced online content,The Tucker Carlson Show, for the Tucker Carlson Network.

On Tuesday, Carlson shared a 1.5-minute clip revealing that things got contentious when the pair touched on the Trump administration's escalating tensions with Iran.

Keep ReadingShow less
Donald Trump; Barack Obama
Suzanne Plunkett-Pool/Getty Images; Scott Olson/Getty Images

Resurfaced Trump Tweet Criticizing Obama Over Iran Comes Back To Bite Him

Amid tensions with Iran, President Donald Trump was criticized for hypocrisy after social media users resurfaced a 2013 tweet in which he accused former President Barack Obama of planning an attack on Iran because of his "inability to negotiate properly."

Trump has declined to clarify whether the U.S. is edging closer to launching strikes on Iran’s nuclear facilities, following a warning from Iran’s supreme leader against any attack and a rejection of Trump’s demand for surrender.

Keep ReadingShow less
​​Elon Musk
Allison Robbert/AFP via Getty Images

Anti-Elon Banner at Stanford

Stanford University graduates were given creative advice from above as an airplane flew over the graduation ceremony with a banner reading, “CONGRATS! DON’T WORK FOR ELON.”

The moment was captured last Sunday during the university’s 134th Commencement ceremony, where the Class of 2025 received their degrees at Stanford Stadium.

Keep ReadingShow less