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The entertainment industry kept these bombshells hidden for years! Join us as we explore the shocking truths behind television's biggest controversies and most beloved shows. From manufactured public personas to rushed endings, these revelations completely changed how we view our favorite programs and personalities. Which truth shocked you the most when it finally came to light?

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00:00If you're watching because you love me, thank you. If you're watching because you don't love me, welcome.
00:04Welcome to WatchMojo. And today, we're looking at TV secrets that took years, sometimes decades, to finally come into focus.
00:13These are the behind-the-scenes truths that reshaped how we understand some of television's biggest shows and most powerful figures.
00:21Tuesday, while handing down the three-to-ten-year sentence, the judge said,
00:26It is time for justice. Mr. Cosby, this is all circled back to you. The time has come.
00:34How powerful TV executives stayed protected for years.
00:38This sending shockwaves this morning through the media world. Media mogul Les Moonves now answering to those allegations against him.
00:45It comes as the broader culture of CBS is being criticized and the network vows an investigation.
00:51For decades, allegations against powerful figures in television often surfaced quietly, if at all, while public consequences arrived much later.
01:02Major investigative reporting eventually revealed how this pattern persisted.
01:06Six women telling The New Yorker they believe their careers were derailed after rejecting Moonves' advances in allegations that date from the 1980s to 2000s.
01:17Four of the women described forcible touching or kissing during business meetings.
01:21In many cases, human resources systems treated the allegations as isolated incidents instead of part of a broader pattern.
01:29This meant that misconduct could continue for years without triggering decisive action.
01:35When public reckonings finally occurred, they often appeared sudden to audiences.
01:40That's right, Amy, those allegations surfacing just weeks ago, and today, this bombshell.
01:46Roger Ailes, the man who built Fox News from the ground up, is out as top boss.
01:51Subsequent investigations showed they were typically the culmination of long-standing concerns that had been documented but contained.
01:59The revelation wasn't simply that misconduct existed.
02:03It was how consistently institutional structures absorbed complaints and delayed accountability.
02:08That understanding fundamentally changed how viewers interpret abrupt firings and late-breaking scandals across the television industry.
02:16Blake, what's the response been from CBS?
02:18Well, CBS says they are very mindful of all sexual harassment allegations and they take them very seriously.
02:24Their board is investigating.
02:26But they also add that CBS does not agree with the broader picture of the company painted in that article.
02:32Why Game of Thrones rushed its ending.
02:35Game of Thrones, the music in this entire series never, ever fell below perfection.
02:40I've always loved the music and they still nail it.
02:42But narratively, it's just a complete shit.
02:46A literal hemorrhoid butthole shit.
02:48It's bad.
02:49I really don't think you could think of a worse ending narratively for this show.
02:53When Game of Thrones concluded, criticism focused heavily on pacing,
02:57with many viewers questioning why the final stretch felt so compressed.
03:01HBO had expressed openness to producing additional seasons, but the decision to conclude the series after eight seasons
03:08ultimately rested with the showrunners.
03:11Whatever ending we were ever going to come up with, like, they say they made us all hairdressers,
03:16everyone still would have been really upset because people joyfully didn't want it to end at all.
03:22By that point, the series had surpassed George R.R. Martin's published novels, meaning the television production was charting its own course toward an end point without completed source material.
03:33At the same time, the scale of the show had become enormous, with extended production timelines, complex effects work, and massive logistical demands.
03:42In retrospect, the rushed ending reflects creative limits and logistical realities colliding with unprecedented ambition.
03:50One of these f***ing goobers wrote X-Men Origins Wolverine, for God's sakes, so we're obviously not dealing with competent, talented people.
03:57And yet, for some reason, these borderline illiterate writers thought they could finish one of the most finely crafted stories in six episodes.
04:05Why ER Lost Its Biggest Stars.
04:08You're not coming with me, are you?
04:13Are you really leaving?
04:19There's nothing for me here.
04:20At its peak, ER was the most watched drama on television, making the departure of major cast members feel confusing and even alarming to audiences.
04:29At the time, these exits were often framed as surprising creative choices.
04:34In reality, though, George Clooney, for example, had publicly signaled well in advance that he planned to leave the series once his contract ended, as his film career accelerated.
04:45I can't stay here.
04:47Not even for me?
04:49Come with me.
04:51I want you to stay here.
04:55I can't.
04:57Anthony Edwards' departure followed a similar pattern.
05:00More broadly, ER's demanding production schedule and long seasons made sustained participation difficult over many years.
05:07In hindsight, the show's evolving cast reflects the realities of television contracts, personal priorities, and the strain of maintaining a high-intensity drama for over a decade.
05:18I have to go, Carol.
05:23I can't stay here.
05:24How the Friends cast changed TV salaries forever.
05:29It is unprecedented.
05:30Six stars from one series holding out for $100,000 per episode salaries.
05:36NBC Home to Friends is busy previewing its fall season for TV critics gathered in L.A.
05:41During Friends' decade-long run, viewers saw six actors whose chemistry appeared effortless and equal on screen.
05:49What wasn't widely known at the time was how deliberately the cast protected that balance off-screen.
05:55Instead of allowing the studio to differentiate pay based on popularity or screen time, they insisted on salary parity, presenting themselves as a single unit.
06:04I got a call from Schwimmer, you know, saying, look, this seems like the thing to do.
06:12And, yeah, and it may have been Courtney's idea.
06:17And I think it was.
06:18She said it was.
06:19But maybe they spoke and Schwimmer called me.
06:22And I just said, oh, yeah, okay.
06:25That sounds really good.
06:26This strangely proved remarkably effective.
06:28As the show's ratings dominance continued, the cast's leverage grew, culminating in salaries of roughly $1 million per episode for each actor in the final seasons.
06:39It became a landmark example of ensemble bargaining in television, influencing how actors approached contract negotiations and how studios assessed the long-term financial risks of hit shows.
06:50Unfortunately, we're in a business where when there's success, there's a history of people renegotiating.
06:56We're in very good hands with Warner Bros., they own the show, and Warner Bros. is having discussions with them.
07:03Why the Lost finale divided fans so deeply?
07:07Who's that?
07:11No!
07:13When Lost ended in 2010, the response was immediate and sharply divided.
07:18Some viewers found the finale emotionally fulfilling, while others were frustrated by unanswered questions.
07:24From early in its run, Lost functioned on two levels, a mystery-driven narrative and a character-focused emotional drama.
07:33Over time, fan culture and intense theorizing placed increasing emphasis on solving every puzzle, shaping expectations around definitive explanations.
07:41Some people might have thought it was great, some people were dissatisfied, I think a lot of people were going to be dissatisfied, almost no matter what they did.
07:48Mm-hmm.
07:49I'm not exactly sure what they did, but it was brilliant, I think the writing was brilliant, I was disappointed it was over.
07:56The finale, however, prioritized emotional closure and thematic resolution over exhaustive answers.
08:02Although the creators eventually addressed misconceptions, including clarifying that the characters were not dead the whole time, dissatisfaction persisted for some viewers.
08:12No!
08:13No!
08:14No!
08:14No!
08:15No!
08:15No!
08:15No!
08:16No!
08:16Norm MacDonald was fired for jokes NBC didn't want.
08:21In his book, O.J. Simpson says that he would have taken a bullet or stood in front of a train for Nicole.
08:28Man, I'm going to tell you, that is some bad luck when the one guy who would have died for
08:32you kills you.
08:34That's why the…
08:36You don't get worse luck than that.
08:40When Norm MacDonald was fired from Saturday Night Live in 1998, the reasons given publicly
08:45were inconsistent and often vague, ranging from performance concerns to creative differences.
08:52Later interviews with MacDonald and SNL insiders clarified the underlying issue.
08:56According to retailers, the most popular Halloween mask this year is O.J. Simpson, and the most
09:02popular Halloween greeting is, I'll kill you and that guy who's bringing over your glasses
09:07or a treat.
09:09As anchor of Weekend Update, MacDonald repeatedly targeted O.J. Simpson long after many felt the
09:15subject had run its course, refusing to soften or move on from the jokes.
09:19In other book news, Prince Charles released an autobiography in which he states that he never
09:23loved Princess Di and that his father pressured him to marry her.
09:26The book is entitled, Of Course O.J. Did It, I Mean, Come On!
09:29Writer Jim Downey stated that the decision came from NBC executive Don Allmeyer, who was
09:35widely described as being close to Simpson and unhappy with the continued focus.
09:40Despite support from parts of the writing staff and cast, MacDonald was removed.
09:43The crowd is torn.
09:46Unscripted reality TV was never really unscripted.
09:50I thought, I thought it was like, this is never gonna happen, this is not going to happen,
09:54they can't do this to seven people.
09:56At first I thought that they were gonna put us in like this little box, and it was gonna
10:00be like a nightmare.
10:02Reality television was marketed as spontaneous and authentic, but over time, producer interviews,
10:09lawsuits, and industry analysis revealed a far more constructed process.
10:14While reality shows are not typically scripted in the same way as dramas, many formats rely
10:20heavily on story production in the field and narrative assembly during editing.
10:25Events are shaped through selective footage, guided interviews, and carefully structured episodes
10:30that create clear story arcs.
10:32Confessionals are often filmed after key moments, allowing producers to frame events in hindsight.
11:00The term unscripted itself became better understood as a production and labor classification rather
11:07than a guarantee of authenticity.
11:09Helping shows avoid the union rules apply to scripting programming.
11:13This is the true story.
11:14True story.
11:15Seven strangers.
11:16Picked to live in a loft.
11:20And have their lives taped.
11:21To find out what happens.
11:23What?
11:24When people stop being polite.
11:25Could you get the phone?
11:26And start getting real.
11:27The real world.
11:28Why Firefly never stood a chance.
11:31Bendis.
11:32Look at me.
11:33Listen.
11:34We're holding this valley no matter what.
11:36We're gonna die.
11:37We're not gonna die.
11:38We can't die, Bendis.
11:39And you know why?
11:41Because we are so very pretty.
11:45We are just too pretty for God to let us die.
11:48Huh?
11:49Look at that chiseled jaw.
11:50Huh?
11:51Come on.
11:52Firefly's cancellation was often attributed to niche appeal, or unfortunate timing.
11:57Retrospectives made clear that the series faced systemic obstacles from its launch.
12:02Fox aired episodes out of their intended order, including not broadcasting the original pilot
12:07first, which disrupted character introductions and world-building.
12:11The show also aired inconsistently, with interruptions that made it difficult for viewers to follow
12:17week to week.
12:18Anyone you walk away from, right?
12:19As long as we got the goods, I call us a win.
12:24Network pressure influenced how the series was presented, emphasizing action and accessibility
12:36as opposed to the ensemble-driven storytelling the creators envisioned.
12:40In retrospect, many argue the rollout and scheduling decisions made it harder for the
12:45show to find and retain viewers, limiting its chances before it could establish itself.
12:51I'm trying to put this as delicately as I can.
12:56How do I know you won't kill me in my sleep?
13:01You don't know me, son, so let me explain this to you once.
13:05If I ever kill you, you'll be awake.
13:07The Tonight Show succession was doomed from the start.
13:11I want to elaborate on an announcement made earlier today, you may have heard about this,
13:16that I'm going to leave the show in 09.
13:19Okay.
13:20Let me explain.
13:21Let me explain how these things work.
13:23When NBC announced in 2004 that Conan O'Brien would eventually succeed Jay Leno as host of
13:28The Tonight Show, it was presented as a rare, orderly succession plan in late-night television.
13:33The plan attempted to manage competing priorities at once, transitioning from a highly successful
13:39incumbent while keeping the network's late-night dominance intact.
13:42Leno remained a major ratings force, while Conan inherited a franchise still closely associated
13:48with its previous era.
13:49Build a set.
13:51Write jokes.
13:52Get dressed.
13:54Brush teeth.
13:55Check.
13:56Move to L.A.
13:58Move to L.A.
14:02The situation deteriorated further when NBC's broader late-night scheduling decisions created
14:18pressure on affiliate programming and ratings.
14:20This led executives to unwisely propose reshuffling the lineup again.
14:25Accounts of the dispute emphasize how these competing interests and proposed changes eroded
14:30the trust of everyone involved.
14:32Well, this cockamamie compromise that NBC cooked up was never going to fly, Harry.
14:37It was inevitable that Conan would walk.
14:39He waited five years to take over this prime real estate at 1130 and now to be evicted by
14:44the very guy he replaced.
14:45So, Conan trying to get the high ground in this increasingly nasty mud fight and clearly
14:50he's a marketable guy who does appeal to younger viewers and may go to Fox or some other outlet.
14:55Dan Schneider's Nickelodeon departure wasn't as clean as it looked.
14:59The Viacom-owned cable network released a statement Monday announcing the decision
15:03not to extend their current deal with Schneider and his Schneider's Bakery production team.
15:07The statement read,
15:08Following many conversations together about next directions and future opportunities,
15:12Nickelodeon and our longtime creative partner Dan Schneider and Schneider's Bakery
15:16have agreed to not extend the current deal.
15:18When Nickelodeon announced in 2018 that it had parted ways with producer Dan Schneider,
15:24the separation was publicly framed as amicable.
15:27Investigations revealed that the network had received complaints related to Schneider's
15:31management style and behavior on set, prompting an internal review.
15:35Let's talk about the massages.
15:37Okay.
15:38Watching the content yesterday, it was disturbing.
15:40It was wrong.
15:41It was wrong that I ever put anybody in that position.
15:44It was the wrong thing to do.
15:45I'd never do it today.
15:46I'm embarrassed that I did it then.
15:48While Nickelodeon declined to publicly detail the findings, multiple reports indicated that
15:53the departure followed scrutiny instead of a simple creative decision.
15:57Some coverage described an internal process and alleged a financial payout tied to the separation,
16:03though the network did not confirm specific terms.
16:06Schneider's departure was not positioned as disciplinary action, yet it was clearly not business as usual,
16:13highlighting how networks sometimes manage reputational risk without full transparency.
16:18In a new docu-series titled Quiet on the Set, former child stars and production members accused Schneider of fostering a toxic workplace.
16:27Schneider said in an interview it was very difficult to watch the series, which aired this week, and he apologized for his behavior.
16:34Jeremy Clarkson's Top Gear firing wasn't a one-time mistake.
16:38I don't really have anything to say about it.
16:40It's a tragedy.
16:41I'm sorry that what ought to have been a small incident sorted out easily turned into something big.
16:46I don't really want to say anything more than that at the moment.
16:48I've only known for the past few minutes.
16:50And if you'll excuse me, I very desperately have to write the eBay listing for my Ferrari.
16:54When Jeremy Clarkson was fired from Top Gear in 2015, early coverage focused on a single incident involving a producer.
17:02Eventual clarification from the BBC showed the decision followed a formal investigation that considered Clarkson's prior conduct as well.
17:10The incident was not treated in isolation, but as the final breach after earlier warnings.
17:17What we know is that the producer, Oshin Tiemann, was indeed attacked by Jeremy Clarkson,
17:21and he was also subjected to sustained verbal abuse using words that no one should have to endure.
17:29For years, Clarkson's confrontational style had been tolerated because of Top Gear's enormous popularity.
17:36The investigation ultimately concluded that his behavior crossed a line that could no longer be defended institutionally.
17:43What once looked like an overreaction became understood as the point where tolerance ran out.
17:49And what about a possible replacement for Jeremy?
17:52Who would you be prepared to work with?
17:54Who would you like to work with?
17:55Uh, much as I think he's a knob, I quite like working with Jeremy.
18:00Why House of Cards had to end suddenly.
18:03Folks have been stopping by Kevin Spacey's star here in Hollywood.
18:06Many tell us they are surprised by the very serious allegations against the two-time Oscar winner.
18:12House of Cards was originally designed as a long-term prestige drama, but its final season arrived abruptly and under radically different circumstances.
18:21At the time, the series' sudden conclusion felt jarring.
18:25Later reporting clarified that the show became structurally impossible to continue as originally envisioned after disturbing allegations against Kevin Spacey led to his removal.
18:35They all described to me a pattern of behavior where Kevin Spacey, who was not only the star but the executive producer of House of Cards, made this toxic work environment where he would prey on these young men in their early twenties.
18:49And that it wasn't just flirting or, you know, maybe crude comments here and there, which is never okay.
18:55It also involved non-consensual physical touching.
18:58Production was halted, scripts were discarded, and the creative direction had to be rebuilt around a different center.
19:04Netflix opted to proceed with a shortened final season rather than abandon the project entirely.
19:10The show's conclusion reflects the practical limits of separating a series from its lead after its narrative had been built around him.
19:18It's a long list.
19:19If you really want me to, I'll be happy.
19:21Listen, I am not the first president to face threats.
19:24I know with Francis sometimes there were several a day.
19:27Is it about the same, what we're dealing with here?
19:31It's, um, significantly up.
19:34By how much?
19:35There are roughly four times as many threats on any given day since you took office.
19:39Now it's twice that since Francis died.
19:41How The Apprentice manufactured a business mogul.
19:45Tiffany, you look a little scared.
19:46You know, you're dealing with two people that are a little older than you.
19:49Two people that have been through the wars.
19:51You really haven't been through the wars.
19:53And I can see that.
19:54Do you feel a little nervous or a little scared being with these two?
19:57Not at all.
19:58Because you're pretty intimidated.
19:59Not at all.
20:00And by the way, I have to tell you, Carol, I'm very impressed with you.
20:01I mean, she's tough and amorous, you have to say that.
20:04When The Apprentice premiered, it depicted future U.S. President Donald Trump as a decisive,
20:09highly successful business authority.
20:11At the time, most viewers accepted that portrayal at face value.
20:15Years later, former producers and reporting clarified how carefully constructed that image
20:20was.
20:21Editing choices emphasized authority, success, and confidence while minimizing uncertainty or
20:27failure.
20:28The show framed Trump as the ultimate decision maker, reinforcing the idea that he was a self-made
20:33executive at the top of his field.
20:35Are you a homosexual, Clay?
20:36I am.
20:37Yes, Mr. Trump, I am.
20:38Oh, is that true?
20:39Yes, it is.
20:40Okay.
20:41Mark, did you know that Clay was gay?
20:44Yes, I did.
20:45He, when we first…
20:46Does everybody know this?
20:47Yes.
20:48Because I didn't know it in the beginning.
20:50It's since been made clear that this portrayal relied heavily on narrative shaping, not objective
20:55documentation of business performance.
20:58Altogether, The Apprentice functioned less as a reality competition and more as a branding
21:03vehicle, creating a simplified, heroic version of its star.
21:08And I can't say I'm disappointed in Tiffany, because she's young and she's against these
21:13two killers, and they're killers.
21:16But I'm disappointed that you didn't call a very good friend of mine, Hugh Hefner, and
21:21say, sir, would you contribute?
21:23Forget about saving it for later.
21:25There is no later.
21:26This is the time.
21:27So I say, Tiffany, you're fired.
21:30The Be Kind brand didn't match life on The Ellen DeGeneres Show.
21:35As you may have heard, this summer there were allegations of a toxic work environment at
21:39our show.
21:40And then there was an investigation.
21:42I learned that things happened here that never should have happened.
21:45I take that very seriously, and I want to say I am so sorry to the people who were affected.
21:50For years, The Ellen DeGeneres Show built its identity around positivity, empathy, and
21:56kindness.
21:57That image was so central that it became inseparable from DeGeneres herself.
22:02In 2020, former employees publicly challenged that narrative, describing a workplace culture
22:08that they said felt inconsistent with the show's on-air message.
22:12Allegations of intimidation, mismanagement, and uneven accountability behind the scenes
22:18ran rampant.
22:19Being known as the Be Kind Lady is a tricky position to be in.
22:23So, let me give you some advice out there.
22:25If anybody's thinking of changing their title or giving yourself a nickname, do not go with
22:29the Be Kind Lady.
22:30Don't do it.
22:32While DeGeneres herself disputed being aware of many issues, the revelations forced a reassessment
22:38of how television brands are maintained.
22:40The show's public tone had masked a complex internal structure where day-to-day experiences
22:47didn't always align with messaging.
22:48Listen, you know, I don't know, I'm a talk show host and you know that, but maybe some
22:53of you know that, you know, I was an actress.
22:56I've played a straight woman in movies, so I'm a pretty good actress.
23:00But I don't think that I'm that good that I could come out here every day for 17 years
23:05and fool you.
23:07This is me.
23:08And my intention is to always be the best person I can be.
23:12Matt Lauer's exit was years in the making.
23:15Just moments ago, NBC News Chairman Andy Lack sent the following note to our organization.
23:20Dear colleagues, on Monday night we received a detailed complaint from a colleague about
23:25inappropriate sexual behavior in the workplace by Matt Lauer.
23:28It represented, after serious review, a clear violation of our company's standards.
23:33When NBC announced Matt Lauer's firing in 2017, the speed of the decision stunned viewers.
23:40Lauer had been one of the most recognizable faces in morning television for decades, and
23:45his removal appeared sudden.
23:47However, internal investigations showed that concerns about Lauer's workplace behavior had
23:52circulated internally for years, handled quietly rather than publicly addressed.
23:57Complaints were reportedly routed through confidential processes that prioritized containment
24:02over escalation.
24:04The final complaint that triggered his dismissal was not treated as an isolated incident, but
24:09as the tipping point for a pattern NBC leadership could no longer ignore amid broader industry
24:15scrutiny.
24:16Some of what is being said about me is untrue or mischaracterized, but there is enough truth
24:21in these stories to make me feel embarrassed and ashamed.
24:25I regret that my shame is now shared by the people I cherish dearly.
24:29Repairing the damage will take a lot of time and soul searching, and I'm committed to beginning
24:34that effort.
24:35Harvey Weinstein wasn't an outlier.
24:37He was the system.
24:40Harvey Weinstein's star is falling fast.
24:42Now more than 40 women, including some of the world's most famous stars, are accusing
24:46the disgraced Hollywood mogul of sexual misconduct or worse.
24:50The allegations stretching across international waters as the investigation grows.
24:55And now the president of France weighing in, saying he intends to strip Weinstein of the
24:59prestigious French Legion of Honor award.
25:02When allegations against Harvey Weinstein became public, early coverage often focused on
25:07him as an exceptionally powerful individual whose behavior had gone unchecked.
25:11In fact, Bombshell Reports detailed how Weinstein, a noted movie mogul and producer of reality
25:16television, was enabled by a powerful system he helped build.
25:20That system included non-disclosure agreements, confidential settlements, legal pressure, and
25:25an industry culture that discouraged speaking out.
25:28Now, Harvey Weinstein gave us a statement saying that all of these interactions were consensual,
25:35and that there was never any retribution.
25:37But the women in this tell a very different story."
25:40Power imbalances and fear of retaliation created conditions where complaints rarely led to
25:45immediate consequences.
25:47Instead of a single bad actor, the reporting highlighted mechanisms that kept allegations
25:52from becoming a sustained public reckoning for years.
25:55It was a dynamic, often described as an open secret culture within the industry.
26:01The exposure fundamentally altered how audiences understood silence, complicity, and accountability
26:06across television and film.
26:09On Friday, model Angie Everhart told TMZ Weinstein touched himself inappropriately in front of
26:14her more than a decade ago during the Venice Film Festival.
26:18When I talked about it before, nobody listened.
26:21I'm glad that people are listening so that it doesn't happen anymore because it's not okay.
26:25Before we continue, be sure to subscribe to our channel and ring the bell to get notified
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26:40Bill Cosby's American Dad image hid decades of allegations.
26:46More allegations of sexual assault have emerged against comedian Bill Cosby.
26:51At least six women have now come forward with stories of abuse dating back decades.
26:56But Cosby is refusing to respond, and his attempt at a television comeback has pretty much ended
27:02before it even began.
27:03For much of his television career, Bill Cosby was treated as one of the most trusted figures
27:09in American entertainment.
27:11For years, allegations against him circulated quietly, often dismissed or minimized in the
27:17absence of sustained media attention.
27:19That perception shifted dramatically in the 2010s, when investigative reporting, court testimony,
27:25and corroborating accounts brought the scope of the allegations into public view.
27:30Last night, it was 80s supermodel Janice Dickinson.
27:33The last thing I remember was Bill Cosby in a patchwork robe, dropping his robe and getting
27:43on top of me.
27:44What changed was not the existence of claims, but their visibility and credibility within mainstream
27:50coverage.
27:51In hindsight, the shock came less from new information and more from how effectively that information
27:57had been sidelined for years, allowing a trusted persona to endure largely unchallenged.
28:04He used his acting skills and that endearing TV personality to win over his victims and then
28:11keep them silent about what he did to them.
28:14At least 60 women have accused Cosby of sexual misconduct, some of them bravely speaking
28:19after the sentencing.
28:20Which TV secret shocked you the most once the truth finally came out?
28:25Drop your pick in the comments and tell us which show or scandal you think still hasn't
28:30gotten its full reckoning yet.
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