Katherine Heigl on her ‘difficult’ label: ‘I may have said a couple of things you didn’t like’

Katherine Heigl arrives back at the Greenwich Hotel after taping 'The Chew' in New York City

There was a moment when Katherine Heigl had arrived, and she could have been her generation’s Jennifer Lawrence/Meg Ryan. She could have written her own Hollywood ticket, made any movie she wanted, delivered big box offices for her romantic comedies and potentially won big awards for her dramatic roles. She was a success story on television and film, and she had that girl-next-door appeal, plus she looked great on every red carpet. Then everything began to derail. She bad-mouthed one of her biggest hits, Knocked Up, and she was criticized by Seth Rogen and Judd Apatow publicly. Then she made a big show of withdrawing her name from Emmy consideration for Grey’s Anatomy, citing the fact that she “did not feel that I was given the material this season to warrant an Emmy nomination.” She whined about her filming schedule when Shonda Rhimes had moved stuff around to make Heigl’s life easier. After a few years, Heigl was off Grey’s Anatomy, with Rhimes invoking her “no a–holes” policy, and Heigl’s movie career was in the dumps. Throughout it all, Heigl was managed by her mother Nancy, who also gained a sh-tty reputation.

Why the backstory? Heigl is back. She’s got a new Netflix show called Firefly Lane about female friendships and how they change over time. Katherine is sort re-introducing herself for this promotion, hoping that all is forgiven. Or, at the very least, forgotten. She’s pretty obviously trying to reclaim her tabloid narrative with a new vibe of “what’s wrong with being a ‘difficult woman’ after all?” Let’s see if it works! You can read this WaPo interview here. Some highlights:

On her many controversies: “I may have said a couple of things you didn’t like, but then that escalated to ‘she’s ungrateful,’ then that escalated to ‘she’s difficult,’ and that escalated to ‘she’s unprofessional.’ What is your definition of difficult? Somebody with an opinion that you don’t like? Now, I’m 42, and that s— pisses me off.”

On female friendship: “Any relationship that has stood the test of that kind of time is going to have moments of fallout, and if it doesn’t, that means somebody is not being honest. Somebody is not being allowed to grow, and somebody is not creating boundaries.”

On apologizing for her mistakes: “At the time, I was just quickly told to shut the f— up. The more I said I was sorry, the more they wanted it. The more terrified and scared I was of doing something wrong, the more I came across like I had really done something horribly wrong.”

Whether she would ever go back to Grey’s: “I could never say never. I think it would just be completely dependent upon the team over there, how they feel about it, and the story.”

She thinks if she had kept making hits, all would have been forgiven: “You can be the most awful, difficult, horrible person on the planet, but if you’re making them money, they’re going to keep hiring you. I knew that whatever they felt I had done that was so awful, they would overlook it if I made them money — but then my films started to make not quite as much money.”

Coming to grips with America’s racism as the mother to a Black child (her daughter Adalaide): “There is not a ton of diversity in Utah, and that was not something we even thought of because we were living in our White bubble and just kind of thinking ‘love is love.’ It was a very big eye opener. I took to seeking advice and counsel from those who are more steeped in this experience and staying up at night trying to figure out how the hell do I have this conversation with my kids?” Here, Heigl became choked up. “I know every mother of a child who has to have this conversation must feel the same, and they’re probably, like, ‘Suck it up, Heigl. This is what has to be done.’ But it feels like taking a piece of their soul.”

On her momager: “Nobody can protect you better than my mother. She is fierce. She has no fear of anybody in power. I realize a lot of young women did not and do not have that. I wish I could loan her out.”

[From The Washington Post]

My take is that I believe both arguments can be true here. On one side, Heigl was absolutely a pill and she largely destroyed her own career all by herself. On the other side, tons of people have done a lot worse than “mouthed off in several interviews” and “been unprofessional” and those people have been able to come back rather easily, if they were even forced to go away. There was always a heavy dose of industry and cultural sexism with Heigl’s story, but I remember covering her during that time period and she absolutely did so much of it to herself, oh my God. Anyway, I’m sort of glad that Netflix has given her the chance to have some kind of comeback and let’s see where it goes.

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Photos courtesy of Avalon Red.

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141 Responses to “Katherine Heigl on her ‘difficult’ label: ‘I may have said a couple of things you didn’t like’”

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  1. Arb says:

    You’re hired to promote a movie. On the promotional your, you say bad things about the movie. That’s not difficult. That’s unprofessional. Why would anyone want to hire you to act in and promote a movie after you do this multiple times? If her argument is that men get away with worse, fine. That’s true. But Bruce Willis being a doc doesn’t magic her into being an asset for a movie so…

    • Julie says:

      She knows that. It’s literally in her interview excerpted in the article we are commenting on. She says “you can be the most awful, difficult, horrible person on the planet, but if you’re making them money, they’re going to keep hiring you”.

      Women’s box office returns have never been as high as the men. Which essentially means that one mis-step could end a woman’s career while a federal crime does not necessarily end a man’s career. We should not be acting as though there is anything remotely sensible about such a system. The longest reign at the top of the female box office believe it or not was Demi Moore, look at her now. She deigned to cross the magical age of fuckability (Amy Schumer TM). Essentially women and minorities will forever be doomed to permanent cancellation for the dumbest crap.

    • M.A.F. says:

      But she didn’t talk bad about Knocked Up while promoting it. It was well after the movie came out.

      And lets remind ourselves that there have been plently of interviews with men promoting their films who clearly don’t give a damn about being professional while conducting an interview or walking down the red carpet and yet all is forgiven.

      • Oy_Hey says:

        This. There was an article that came out, at the time discussing how KH and Meghan Fox had both been effectively blacklisted while Shia Leboeuf (yikes) was on the same tour with Meghan and had way more trivial things to say about Michale Bay. He then went on to do one more transformer movie and an indiana jones before his own mess started coming to life.

        I have actually never found Katherine’s comments to be wrong. Knocked Up was sexist. If you watch it now (hell, then) it was mansplaining garbage. And Shonda did do her wrong. The season she spoke about had her playing a human doctor that revived a deer and had sex with a ghost. Find the lie.

      • GOLDEN says:

        100% this

      • Julie says:

        Agreed. I was so disgusted to hear actual women say that she just should not have taken the Knocked Up role. I remember even back then trying to explain to commenters that the tone of a movie is set during editing. And that’s especially so for a Judd Apatow movie because of all the improvising. But of course the pitchforks were already out and God knows the mob loves nothing better than a woman to burn.

        I don’t believe for even one second that the system shunned her over the Shonda Rhimes fallout. After all she went on to do the Ugly Truth after the snarky comment about the writing on Grey’s Anatomy. She even completed a couple of seasons after that.

        What did her in was Judd apatow and Seth Rogen twisting the knife and essentially bramding her an evil b****. I remember them talking about her on Howard Stern and knowing at that point that she was finished. The Hollywood Bros absolutely love that show and if they missed her minor comment on Vanity fair, they most certainly got caught up on that day.

      • SKF says:

        And also, SHE WAS RIGHT!! Let’s revisit what she said:

        “Heigl, who maintained that working on Apatow’s set was the “best filming experience of her career”, nonetheless told Vanity Fair that she found Knocked Up: “A little sexist. It paints the women as shrews, as humourless and uptight, and it paints the men as lovable, goofy, fun-loving guys”

        100% true!! The women were humourless, uptight shrews and the men were lovable and goofy. Not a lie was spoken. Rogen and Apatow got all butt-hurt about it; but she was spot on and I believe it made them uncomfortable because they knew it was true but didn’t want to face it.

        She didn’t say it during promo, she said it afterwards, and women should not be silenced and punished when they say things like this. The narrative around these comments drives me crazy!

      • Miss Margo says:

        Yep yep! Agree completely. All she said about knocked up were facts. The women were shrill, and the men were goofballs. It is an incredibly sexist movie and you can tell that it was all men behind the scenes.

    • superashes says:

      Except she didn’t do it multiple times.

      Robert Pattinson repeatedly insulted Twilight, Shia LaBeouf slammed Transformers (and physically abused multiple partners along the way), Bill Murray repeatedly insulted Garfield, and so on and so forth, and there was no real fallout.

      No one ever talks about Seth Rogan being a complete asshole about the whole thing either. He didn’t write or direct Knocked Up, yet he carried on about it, discussing her comments as an abuse of trust, dragging her years after the interview occurred. Then, years down the road when she apologized for the comments, he in essence, while ostensibly accepting her apology, implied it wasn’t good enough because he was somehow entitled to a personal private apology (for a film he didn’t write or direct).

      He is the reason the Knocked Up comments became such a big deal, Apatow was trying to play the middle but Rogan was total knives out.

      • Chelsea says:

        Plesse don’t get t get me started on Robert Pattinson. It annoyed me so much that not only did he repeatedly shat on twilight but also took personal shots at the books’ writer and mocked their fans yet Kristen was always called a bitch. Like yeah the books were terrible and the fans were nuts but it was insane how disrespectful he was while still doing the movies and he was never called out ehile Kristen who was a teen when they started was crucified for being awkward even though she never insulted the franchise.

      • Matilda says:

        This is sooooo on point but never occurred to me. Have seen YouTubes praising Rob for being so cool and honest about speaking his mind about Stephanie Meyer (he basically said Twilight was like a romantic fantasy of hers), Twilight, the Ed Cullen character, etc. Men get away with so much. But on the other hand he’s always lighthanded about it, not angry or serious. He’s always a bit giggly and happy so people take it as, “This eccentric and very talented guy is just being honest. He’s got balls.”

        I’ve always like Katherine Heigel but I don’t agree you should use an award nomination to criticise your unhappiness with something about your work. In fact, don’t do it publicly unless you really have no choice. Take it up with your boss multiple times. You’re taking your colleagues down with you when you do bad PR like that for a TV show, production, company, whatever.

    • Kitten says:

      Jeremy Renner.

      How that foul-mouthed, toxic misogynist has a career is anyone’s guess.

      Oh wait, he’s a man.

  2. MaryContrary says:

    So her story is that she had opinions that people didn’t like? And she apologized then but it wasn’t enough to satisfy, and her critics kept demanding more? So she’s not sorry, it’s everyone else’s problem and she’s couching this like she was the victim in all of this. Got it. Eye roll.

    • Jules says:

      Yea she’s really trying to work an angle here and it’s not working. She seems to be not well-liked across the board, I don’t recall anyone that she worked with sticking up for her. I’m gonna go with the majority take here.

      • MarineTheMachine says:

        James Marsden who plays her love interest in 27 dresses is actually sticking up for her in the WaPo article and I liked his perspective.

      • Laura says:

        The more she does stuff like this, the more I like her. Makes her interesting. I don’t care how much people in the industry like her or not. And, btw I think James Marsden is dreamy. 😉

    • Jim Berel says:

      Lord, she never learns. Open mouth, insert foot. Being able to at least fake gratitude and professionalism goes a long way. She always seems to just bury herself deeper.

  3. Amy Bee says:

    Doesn’t she have a Korean daughter too? Why wasn’t she asked about the racism that both daughters will face?

    • Julie says:

      Perhaps because anti-black racism is more systematic and physically threatening? I’m not sure that parents of Korean kids are worried that their sixteen-year-old daughter will be shot dead at a traffic stop. It’s okay to acknowledge that one section of poc have it way worse than others

      • Queen Meghan’s Hand says:

        Many Asian-Americans have been the victims of hate crimes in the last year because of the racist labeling of Covid-19 as the “China Flu”. So along with violent anti-blackness deep and entrenched within our institutions, it’s not a safe time for Asian-Americans.

      • Amy Bee says:

        People of Asian descent suffer from racism as well. All forms of racism exist and should be fought against equally.

      • Maureen says:

        Let us not forget that we also had Japanese internment camps during WWII. Also, most white Americans have absolutely no idea the difference between a Chinese, Japanese, Filipino or Korean person. Also, there is an unspoken rule in Ivy League schools about admitting a certain number of Asian students into their ranks. Racism against Asians is generally quieter than racism against black people. It is still there and insidious.

      • Julie says:

        Did you all miss the word “more” in my comment? The pushback by more privileged poc when anti-black racism is confronted is super problematic. Once again it is okay to acknowledge that some groups within the umbrella have it way worse than others. When a group of people literally have to teach their children to avoid the police – the one institution that should provide safety – and all you can come up with is that affirmative action in ivy league universities has a quota system, you need to have a seat right next to the Trumpers. If you have to dig back two world war II internment camps to find anything anywhere analogous to what black people experience today, join your buddies in the corner. And yeah absolutely it’s awful that hate crimes increased during Trump’s anti-china crusade, but let me remind you that the hate crimes against black people never stopped in the first place.

        So I’ll say it again for those in the back, black POC have it way worse than others. If it pains you to admit that or you can’t abide not being included in the conversation about anti-black racism, then you have just told us exactly what you are. And therefore not worth engaging

      • Lady D says:

        “a group of people literally have to teach their children to avoid the police”
        Painful to read, it must be unimaginably heartbreaking to live. I wish I could help.

      • SomeChick says:

        @Lady D, you can help. BLM and other groups could use your support. vote and campaign for antiracist politicians, especially at the local level. and don’t remain silent when someone says a racist thing. change needs to happen at all levels.

      • DeeDeeIssa says:

        Thank you for saying everything I was about to Julie. I am a black woman who believes in diversity and inclusion of all cultures. I was raised in Asia for a few years and always make it a point of standing up against anti Asian sentiments. However, the Asian community still has a long way to go when it comes to confronting their racist ideas of black people.

        My 1st child didn’t even make it the whole year of pre-k before experiencing racism. A friend said her parents had told her she couldn’t play with black children. Next incident was in 1st grade, different school, same exact situation. Kid was told by parents not to play with black kids. Both schools had a low African American population but it was not a white child who delivered the first racist blow to my child, it was a Chinese child in both situations.

        In both situations the families had recently immigrated from China. My child’s ancestors however, built this country. This land was watered in their blood, sweat and tears. It is a SYSTEM bcz it puts black people last and allows other minorities to give anti black sentiments the breath of fresh air it needs to survive.

        So, I say this with love to other ppl of color, don’t follow the path of least resistance. Don’t take the crumbs left behind by white supremacy. Don’t sit back and wait for the fight to be over to exclaim “what about me?!” Come out swinging. No more staying neutral to achieve respectability and then asking why we talk about black struggles. We talk about it so much because we are literally out here STRUGGLING to be treated like human beings deserving of dignity. Sorry about this long post and bad grammar, I’ve devoted all my brain cells to my kids remote learning lol.

      • Godwina says:

        This. We have to be honest if racism is ever going to obliterated (not that it will). There are literally scholarships in the US and Canada for Black and Indigenous students only, because other racialized students tend to be treated better in academia due to higher expectations and income levels (on average) of parents–more doors are open to them than Black and Indigenous kids, and more employers are willing to hire them (anti-Muslim nonsense dissipates fast when you’re a capitalist with a research lab looking for scientists). That’s just ONE example of the differences that we have to acknowledge if things are to get better for everyone–and how vital it is to bear in mind the way class intersects with race. And as others have said, it’s not even entering in the blood-red statistics that parents of Black and Indigenous kids are rightfully so worried about. (Or the anti-Blackness that is entrenched among some other POC groups.)

    • Scotchy says:

      @Julie as a black woman long time reader and sometime commenter on this site I appreciate what you wrote. When I read the all racism is equal comment, I sighed and started drafting a response only to see yours was brilliant so thank you for understanding and eloquently breaking it down for those that don’t.
      Feel free to shout it out for those in the back that just cannot or do not want to understand over and over again because this black lady just doesn’t have it in her anymore.

    • MadamNoir24 says:

      Amy- I one hundred percent agree with that testament. Yes, all POC have experienced racism but no other POC have experienced racism the way black people have experienced it. It may not be a popular thing to say but other POC of color have contributed to the racist treatment that black people have experienced. I live in Brooklyn, New York at a point I live in a predominantly Asian area and the amount of racism I experience from them was horrible. They would say mean things to me, cross the street not to walk next to me, when I bought things they would not give me my change back in my hand they would put it on the counter. I eventually had to move because it started happening to my son, we would go to the park they would tell their children not to play with my son. Black people are the only POC that experience racism not only from white people but from other POC too. It’s incredibly hard being a black person in this country.

    • Ky says:

      @Amy Bee I also think it’s possible that having had an Asian sister she doesn’t feel that raising an Asian child is something that she is ill-equipped to do. She may feel that she has the support to help her daughter along. I do however think it’s really telling of what is going on in her life and her world view that she would move her Black child to Utah. Mormons have a long discriminatory history with Black people and though the church is changing its stance those attitudes linger. If she had even one Black friend, the idea that her Black child wouldn’t thrive in that environment wouldn’t have come as such a surprise. She seems to be someone that lives in a bubble and doesn’t have things that are outside of that influencing her.

  4. Leskat says:

    It’s awful when people try to brush away asshole remarks with “oh, I’m just being honest!” No, honey, you’re just an ass. She bit multiple hands that fed her when she wasn’t being mistreated or abused or harassed. She was in demand and was a decent actress for her category and she ruined it all because she just wanted to stir up shit.

    • LillyfromLilooet says:

      @Leskat and I would chime in, no good manager steers their client’s career into the ground. Her mother did not help KH steer the difficulties of show biz, her mother helped her get to where she is now, post kitty litter (or was it dog food) commercial and doing this sorry-not-sorry tour.

      Portraying herself as a victim when she refused an Emmy nomination with a quote that insulted everyone she worked with leaves me with a “no thanks” in terms of trying out her latest show.

      • Leskat says:

        Yes!! Her mother enabled her and probably fed her some special snowflake story and Katherine never paused to think of whether her behavior was right or not. It’s sad to ruin what could’ve been a respectable acting career by being an insufferable jack weed.

      • Humbugged says:

        Chyler Leigh refused nominations for Greys multiple times but had the sense not to bang on about it

  5. ms says:

    You know, she was really perfect in Suits, when they stopped trying to cast her as “nice” and let her just be a conniving asshole… until they gave Samantha a heart and a “wrong side of the tracks” story to show why she was a manipulative cow, whereas Katie Heigl evidently feels entitled to say whatever she wants without any blowback. I’m an opinionated woman and I have gotten in trouble for it. This is not that.

    The lack of awareness she has about herself is really astounding and ridiculously immature, and unprofessional. No wonder she has had trouble getting jobs. Makes me wonder why she’s back at all.

  6. observing says:

    Maybe she was unprofessional with airing her opinions, but I don’t mind her onscreen. I’ve never really avoided a movie because she was in it. She might or not be difficult, but I think she gets the job done onscreen for the types of roles she takes onscreen.

    I don’t really get her styling though. But I think she’s watchable onscreen. I wouldn’t actively avoid her so I think she’s talented enough for me to forget that her peers probably don’t like her much.

  7. Queen Meghan’s Hand says:

    She really was so good on the early seasons of Grey’s Anatomy, but I’m not missing her on my tv screen, you know? I hope this goes well for her and I hope she learned some professionalism. If you did not experience any workplace safety or harassment issues, keep your negative opinions about the job to yourself, and inside your home. It’s not appropriate for a press interview.

  8. Kay says:

    I’ve always liked her. She never said anything that was particularly untrue – the writing on Greys was trash. Knocked Up was wildly sexist. Sure her delivery could have used some reworking but she wasn’t wrong.

    • Maria says:

      If the material is so bad you will be badmouthing it even in promotion then don’t accept it, lol.

      • Julie says:

        On a serialised TV show she’s obviously under contract, I’m sure there are clauses that require her to give substantial notice prior to pulling out. it’s also instructive to note that one of the rumours about her in that time was that she attempted to give notes to the writers room and that too was painted as her being difficult.

        As for the movie Knocked Up, it was heavily improvised as was Apatows and Rogens style at the time. They literally joke about how much footage they shoot so that they have options during editing. At that point TV actress has zero power to influence the tone or even the themes that the movie will take. it’s exhausting to keep having explaining this 10 years down the line. This was not David Fincher who writes and rehearses meticulously to the script, fgs.

      • Maria says:

        Contractually obligated to deliver lines does not equal being contractually obligated to try to withdraw your own performance from awards consideration.
        And as far as Knocked Up – I am aware of the improvisational style of those films but that does not mean anyone forced her to say the lines or do the scenes she did.
        In any case, she’s always been prickly and she can still be so even if her words about certain topics may be correct.
        Do I think she deserves to shunned forever or whatever people say? No, but that doesn’t make her likeable.
        Megan Fox is an example of someone who was unfairly painted as difficult in the late 2000’s.
        This is not that.
        I’m sorry are you are exhausted though.

      • Maria says:

        To be honest, yes she is a woman, and yes women do not get the same benefit of the doubt as men – but she is also a privileged white blonde woman who enjoyed publicly calling out the creative “failures” of the Black female showrunner.

    • sa says:

      I completely agree.

    • Lemon says:

      Yeah I agree about Knocked Up. It was pretty refreshing actually to see someone speaking transparently about that movie.

      I get that it’s not professional but I thought her punishment didn’t fit the crime. After Weinstein bestowed the “difficult” label on Ashley Judd, I saw it was a way to ruin careers, especially for women. Christian Bale can get work after his abusive on set meltdown, where is his “difficult”label?

      • Ann says:

        That’s how I see it. She was being presumptuous, and should probably have kept her opinion to herself, but she wasn’t wrong. I really enjoyed “Knocked Up” and I like Rogen and Apatow, but yeah, the female lead DID get kind of screwed over in that movie and it was treated as a happy ending. And the writing on Grays did go down the toilet. The whole “Ghost Denny” thing was embarrassing. Also, I hate it when writers always deal with an actor’s departure by killing off the character. It’s lazy and it feels like petty revenge.

        Heigl is a good actress, she’s beautiful IMO, and she delivers in her projects. So I hope this works out for her because I think she got trashed in the media too much for too long. What she did was not THAT bad. That said, she should be a good co-worker because, well, everyone should.

      • Becks1 says:

        I was just going to mention Ashley Judd – since the Weinstein revelations, I’m cautious when an actress is labeled as “difficult” since it is a label that is very very rarely ever applied to men in Hollywood.

        I dont remember her comments about Knocked up but I hated that movie, we got halfway through and turned it off, god it was awful. I do remember some of the drama around Grey’s and I dont think her comments were professional, but I dont remember too many of the other details.

    • tealily says:

      Yeah, I’ve always been kind of on the fence with her because I sort of feel the same way. She seems rather abrasive in interviews, but some people are just blunt and that’s how their minds work. I like watching her. I’m not sure I’d like her personally, but I don’t really dislike her in interviews. I hope she gets another shot here.

    • Elizabeth says:

      I completely agree about Knocked Up. That sounds like it was an unpleasant work environment where she wasn’t respected as a professional with her views on the character and its development. That’s on Apatow and Rogan, and the broader Hollywood community. I have zero problem with her calling out awful men. Of course it’s going to impact her career because awful men run Hollywood.

      In terms of Gray’s Anatomy, I think she wasn’t as professional or diplomatic as she could have been and probably should have been, but a lot of cast members including Ellen Pompeo have been open about the difficult work environment they all faced. Plus that one cast member called another (her close friend) a homophobic slur. A work environment like that takes a true toll. The company had a responsibility not to damage and hurt its workers or allow them to be mistreated.

    • M.A.F. says:

      Especially since more has come out about how Shonda Rhimes dealt with the whole Isaiah Washington/TR Knight issue and just the over all environment of the show.

    • superashes says:

      I agree as well, remember the whole Denny is imaginary fiasco where she was hallucinating sex but was actually loudly masturbating in her room? I realize I’m channeling Chris Rock here, and I’m not saaaaaaying she should have explicitly removed herself from Emmy consideration, I’m just saying I understand.

      • Ann says:

        Ghost Denny was a real low point for Grays. I never followed it closely but I do remember that and I thought it was really stupid. And though I was never a “Mer/Der” shipper, I don’t blame people for being pissed off when they killed him off. I mean, I’m not sure how else they would have handled it but given that they had already done it to George and Lexie and others as well probably, it gets a bit ridiculous after a while. Meredith Gray knows way too many people who die in vehicular accidents.

    • Vavavoom says:

      I agree Kay. I liked her movies, especially 27 dresses and the one with Tom Selleck and Ashton Kutcher. She was adorable and fun in those! Knocked Up was gross and stupid. A guy’s movie, which have been problematic for a long time. I gave her kudos for sticking up for herself and not being afraid to say what she thinks, but she was one of the first people to be universally cancelled. If a man did any of the things she did, for example Mark Wahlberg, It would have been applauded.

  9. Ann says:

    Not much introspection happening at all here. If she doesn’t understand by now that her actions were unprofessional she never will. Yes she absolutely is suffering worse consequences because of sexism, but girl, come on, you bad mouthed your own movie during the promotion! Take some responsibility. Or at there very least educate yourself on basic professionalism.

    • shanaynay says:

      +1

    • Sandra says:

      She didn’t bad mouth the movie during promotion. She said something well after it was out about her own character in it. Seth Rogen went on a rampage and made it seem way worse than it actually was.

  10. Chicken Tetrazzini! says:

    Honestly, when I saw her face on my netflix, my only thought was that I did not miss her and mild disappointment that she was back. No thank you.

  11. ms says:

    I’m major side eyeing her “insightful” comments on female friendship. My friends and I don’t have “fallouts.” We handle disagreements like adults by talking to each other when somebody messes up and hurts someone, we don’t fight about it. But, I guess that’s what happens when you’re mature and have relationships with other mature people. It’s really telling that she thinks you have to have a fallout or someone’s “not being honest” or “not growing.” She sounds fun to be friends with.

    Everything she says clearly reinforces to me that she is one of those really difficult people who thinks everyone else is the problem because she’s just “being honest.” Those people are great to have around until they decide they’re upset with you, and then they throw you under the bus.

    • Esmom says:

      I’m guessing she was talking about that in the context of the new show, which is about two friends with a ton of baggage, not about her own friendships. But who knows. I’m not sure I care enough to read the whole article.

  12. Watson says:

    She’s a no for me. She shat on everything that made her famous and then was shocked that Shonda killed her character off and Seth Rogan was pissed at her. Like duh. Her comments were deeply unlikable during a time when she was on top of the world. I’m surprised she got another chance at fame given her reputation.

  13. Chaine says:

    How could she adopt a black child without ever considering or planning for how to talk about race and racial issues with the child?!! If she wasn’t prepared for that, I expect at some point we will also be treated to Kathryn Heigl Unexpected Adoption Revelations Part Two: International Adoptees.

    • Mee yo says:

      @CHAINE you’d be surprised how many white women adopt black kids with no thought as to how life is for AA. My friend nanny’s a biracial kid who of course got called the N word in….4th grade by a white classmate. This is a upper middle class neighborhood. The teacher did nothing, principal could barely be bothered. My friend had to press the kid’s parents to go to the school a and to go talk to the other kids parents. Both parents (white) literally cowered in the corner. Didn’t do either. So my friend had multiple long talks with the kid about how to handle racists shit and rebuilt his self esteem.

  14. sassafras says:

    I hate the double standard that she received from the industry. Male actors and directors can literally make people cry, throw things at people, abuse them, molest and assault people, and they still have careers.
    Feel whatever way you want about her personally, but she 100% only got treated the way she did by producers/ media because she was a woman.

    • Kristen says:

      Maybe? But that doesn’t mean that because some men act terribly that women should get a pass for acting terribly also. Men who behave that way should also face consequences – what happened to KH was absolutely appropriate given the way she behaved.

      • observing says:

        I never really thought she behaved terribly though (at least not in public anyway.) I think she just said some things people didn’t like, but that, as far as I can tell, seemed to be the end of it. Unless there are other stories I don’t know about, and I’m sure someone can enlighten me.

    • BL says:

      Yes. Complete DOUBLE STANDARD. Why are we holding women to a much higher bar than men? Come on people.

    • Grant says:

      Why are we not having this same conversation about people like Christian Bale, who has behaved like a deranged toddler in the way that he spoke with/screamed at cast and crew? Or that director (David O. Russell, maybe?) who yelled at Lily Tomlin? Or Jeffrey Tambor, who went off on national treasure Jessica Walter while filming Arrested Development… Yeah, I don’t get why Katharine Heigl has been excoriated in the press for a decade while men like these three (maybe excepting Tambor, considering that he lost his job on Transparent) have been able to behave the way they did without any kind of blow-back or damage to their reputation.

      • BL says:

        Well said @grant

      • sunny says:

        Absolutely we should have the conversation. One thing not mentioned on this thread beyond the sexism is the level of talent involved. Bale is one of the best(and most acclaimed actors of his generation), Heigel is not. That absolutely factors into who society and Hollywood are ready to forgive. Also as someone pointed out up thread, her behaviour could be seen as interfering with making money. That sadly drives everything- when you are unprofessional, or can’t be trusted to do press, it is harder for people to work with you.

      • Grant says:

        Comparing talent is so subjective though. I think Heigl is actually a pretty compelling actress in her own right, so much so that shee (like Bale) also received industry accolades, including an Emmy award, the highest honor for TV in the United States.

  15. jbyrdku says:

    I don’t have any strong feelings about her one way or another, but I will say this. Compared to things that I’ve heard men say, her “whining” was minor.

    Was she professional? No, not in my opinion. Do I think she deserved to get slapped down to the C or D list so quickly? No. Not particularly. In an era when where actors like Shia LaWhatever continue to be welcomed back no matter many people they treat like shit, or what terrible things they say, Katherine Heigl just doesn’t seem that deserving of a mountain of hate, to me.

    • megs283 says:

      Yup. Also, I enjoy watching her in things. I saw the promo for Firefly Lane and now I want to watch the first episode.

      • jbyrdku says:

        Same. I don’t normally tune in for those types of shows (I love Good Girls though!), but I enjoy Katherine as an actress and think it’s worth a look.

    • Grant says:

      So agree. Sorry, Shonda, that Katharine spoke the truth about the sh!tty writing on Grey’s and how sexist Knocked Up. Hurting people’s fee-fee’s about quality of work may have been slightly unprofessional in biting the hand that feeds you, but it pales in comparison to the unprofessional manner that men like Christian Bale, David O. Russell, Shia le Beouf, Jeffrey Tambor, etc. have publicly conducted themselves, without nearly the same recourse that Heigl endured. Maybe Tambor lost his job on Transparent, but he then had people like Jason Bateman cop for him (in front of Jessica Walter–Tambor’s victim, no less). It’s so gross.

  16. KL says:

    I have to believe, from the other things i’ve heard, that the public comments were just the excuse to distance themselves from an actress whose managerial team made people’s lives hell.

    And even that probably wouldn’t have stopped her momentum if she’d had good roles, but she was in some truly terrible movies. “One for the Money” had franchise potential and a built-in audience of fans from the books, and it bombed anyway. Not even lesbians like “Jenny’s Wedding,” and we literally watch anything with lesbians in it. ANYTHING.

    Anne Hathaway’s been hated for sport, so has Lawrence, I would never discount how misogyny comes into these things (although it’s still minor compared to the treatment of WOC like Kelly Tran). But Heigl literally had everything going for her, and managed to crash and burn regardless. That’s got to be more complicated than a few unfortunate interviews (some of which told no lies).

    • Ann says:

      Ghost Denny was a real low point for Grays. I never followed it closely but I do remember that and I thought it was really stupid. And though I was never a “Mer/Der” shipper, I don’t blame people for being pissed off when they killed him off. I mean, I’m not sure how else they would have handled it but given that they had already done it to George and Lexie and others as well probably, it gets a bit ridiculous after a while. Meredith Gray knows way too many people who die in vehicular accidents.

  17. GuestwithCat says:

    She may be everything everyone is saying she is, but she’s not wrong. The industry is dominated by “not nice” people. And most of them are men. She is at worst, annoying and unprofessional in some respects. At the other end of the spectrum are the men who beat, cheat, and sexually assault other people and some people think they should still be working in the industry. As long as people are going to stand up for Roman Polanski and Woody Allen, as long as Shia LeBeouf gets a gig, I’m not going to side-eye her.

  18. lucy2 says:

    I agree it’s probably a little of both. I can believe she was treated more harshly than a man in the same position (Pattinson criticizing Twilight is often the example I see) but I also believe she (and her mother) probably were difficult. There’s been stories from pretty much every set, I think? At some point, it can’t always be everyone else’s fault.

    I think it’s great and necessary to stand up for yourself, but there’s a difference between that and actively being a pain that makes everyone else’s jobs on a set harder for no good reaason.

  19. Stef says:

    I’m glad she’s back and I really enjoyed Firefly Lane. I binged it while working from home the past few days and I think she did a good job of showing her acting chops. While she was never my favourite actress,I’ve enjoyed a lot of her films and I find her likeable on screen.

    She may be difficult and a bit of an A-hole to work with but look at A-hole men like Tom Cruise: he always gets a pass and has been working consistently even though he is a terrible person. That’s just one of many potential examples…

    The Hollywood double standard for “difficult women” is alive and well….

    • Watson says:

      STEF: The difference between Tom and Katherine is the fact that Tom made billions of revenue, and he always knew what the bottom line was: promote the movie and make money.

      Despite being in a cult and clearly deranged, that man is famous for being gracious on every red carpet and doing world wide press junkets all with a smile on his face.

      Does making money and clearly understanding his job excuse his behaviour? No. But it sure explains why he’s gotten so many more passes than Katherine.

      • observing says:

        I think she herself pointed that out. She admits her films didn’t make much money.

        That said, if I’m scrolling on tv and she pops up I’m not going to change the channel. I’ll watch whatever rom-com she picked and her offscreen behavior doesn’t affect whether I choose to watch her onscreen.

        There are other actors like Shia LaBoeuf, who even I’d admit are likely pretty talented, but I am repulsed enough to think to myself “Um I don’t really want to watch him right now.”

        She’s not repulsive in the kind of way that i’d refuse to watch her on tv or in movies. I’m probably more repulsed by Ashton Kutcher but no one really says anything bad about him.

        As for Tom Cruise, I am able to forget about the Scientology stuff when I watch himself. Whatever he’s like in real life, it doesn’t seem to carry over into his onscreen acting. I think he and Heigl are a little similar that way. I don’t think she has his mad charisma (his is rare), but nothing she does offscreen really affects my ability to watch her onscreen. When she paid for her offscreen behavior, it did seem like a weirdly random and subjective thing to happen to her because she’s not repulsive like some male actors I can think of. She’s not really….what’s the word….gross?

    • Veronica S. says:

      Does Cruise have a history of being really abusive on set, though? I know there was the MI7 debacle, but I remember it sticking out specifically because people were shocked by it as not excessively common. I seem to recall most of his professional behavior has been reputedly pretty great, if intense, and he’s known for having great work ethic. I mean, his personal life, no argument there – dude’s a mess who actively supports an abusive cult, but I thought he had a pretty good work reputation.

  20. Mrs. Peel says:

    How ironic that she’s filming a new series about female friendships, when I feel her only friend in the entire world is her mother.

  21. Dlc says:

    I’m interested in this. Yes she was a pill, and yes, sexism was involved in that narrative, and yes she was /is a gifted actress. I also liked that while she is in great shape, she is not emaciated thin, as it seems too many actresses are.

  22. SM says:

    I am not her fan but I just thought that with all the conversations around the sexism in movies and behind the cameras, did anything she said is wrong? Women have complained about stereotypes in movies and lack of realistic portrail of women on Hollywood. What she said about her character in Knocked up is true and that film was and is a part of the larger problem. Romcoms too often chose to portray women in negative light, they are prude and stuck up or just a plot device. I think somehow since that movie Seth Rogen managed to move into a bit more interesting area of story telling and that immensely helped his career, he he kept making the same movie over and over he would turn into an Adam Sandler. So basically by deeming her difficult, what women are told is keep quite and be happy with the material you are given.
    Yes, she may lack tact and is rude but as far as I know she never became unprofessional, as in showed up to set drunk, was late and did not know her lines, unlike some of the widely praised male movie stars. So yeah, I understand the argument of don’t trash your own boss who gives you work but at the same time, it’s women who have to fight for good material and its also women who punished for raising the issue with that.

  23. Gold ladder says:

    I feel like this is the fifth or sixth time she has tried to make a comeback. She’s had a few comeback vehicles since Grey’s, done the rounds where she’s tried to address her reputation, and then disappeared when whatever she was in turned out to be a flop.

  24. M.A.F. says:

    It is so interesting the comments here verus other sites I have visited that covered this story earlier in the week. So many ready to just brush her aside and hold her to a different standard for being vocal about her work and the double standard and yet men do this all the time and peole are ready to forgive them. She didn’t bite the hand that feed her, she was being honest.

    • Midge says:

      Really, the ungrateful Emmy nom snub, shitting on the Gray’s writers, etc? Shitting on Knocked Up? She absolutely bit the hand that fed her over and over again. And to reply to your “so” comment below: Too much filler looks bad. She’s an actress and this is a gossip site, and we are saying she looks weird and don’t want to see her wonky fake face on netlflix

      • M.A.F. says:

        she did not shit on any of those, she was honest about her work. I don’t need a reminder that this is a gossip site. Have a great day.

    • Kristen says:

      Honestly she did bite the hand that fed her. The network puts time and money into having someone considered for an award nomination, and actors winning those awards return money and prestige to the networks and studios. Withdrawing herself not only was incredibly rude to the writers and show runners, but also thoughtless in terms of the work that the network put into securing a nomination.

      • M.A.F. says:

        How is it rude? She didn’t think her performance that season was worth a nomination. Again, double standard. If one of her co-stars did the same thing, would you be okay with it? Would you pat on him the back & thank him for being honest?

      • Kristen says:

        M.A.F.: She didn’t say anything about herself or her own performance. She specifically criticized the writers and the show:

        “I did not feel that I was given the material this season to warrant an Emmy nomination and in an effort to maintain the integrity of the academy organization, I withdrew my name from contention,” she said in a statement. “In addition, I did not want to potentially take away an opportunity from an actress who was given such materials.”

    • AlpineWitch says:

      I think those two things are not mutually exclusive. She bit the hands that fed fed and she was being honest.

      Having said that, men only get punished by Hollywood if they behave irresponsibly on set. If they beat to death their wives or abuse people at home, Hollywood turns a blind eye to it.

      • M.A.F. says:

        do men get punished though? do they? There is audio of Christian Bale blowing up on set and yet it is hardly ever brought up. Heigl “complains” about the writing on her show and she gets black listed. Unreal.

  25. NotSoSocialButterfly says:

    The top photo shows the thick “meaty” mid face people get as a result of excessive filler.

    • M.A.F. says:

      so?

    • SpankyB says:

      Meaty is a good description. She’s not as thin as she used to be (I think her body looks great) it could be weight gain combined with fillers. It was a little jarring seeing her face next to Sarah Chalk who is only 2 years older.

  26. Justjj says:

    I always thought there were a lot of stories about her yelling at costume and makeup people and being horrid to fans and such? Do I have her confused with another 00s blonde?

    • Emilia says:

      No, I think you’re right. People are super focused on her comments about Greys and Knocked Up but are forgetting the stories of her treating crew members like crap. This isn’t just about her bad-mouthing a couple projects but about being awful to work with.

  27. Midge says:

    Wow, she’s learned nothing. Her house is up for sale. Next.

  28. shanaynay says:

    I happen to think she’s a terrible actress. I have no plans on watching anything she’s in.

  29. BnLurkN4eva says:

    I enjoy her work and so when she’s in anything that’s available to me, I watch and enjoy it. I don’t particularly care about her reputation, because as far as I know, she’s never hit anyone, been racially abusive, homophobic etc. I think it’s like she said, her vehicles were no longer making money and so this was an opportunity to dump her and move on. I wish her the best with this new vehicle and will give it a twirl.

  30. Veronica S. says:

    I think there’s no getting around that she dug her own hole on some of those issues, especially with the Emmy situation. That’s just…biting the hand that feeds you in a really stupid way. You just don’t say that kind of stuff because it comes off extremely arrogant, suggesting that you know better than the people who chose the nomination and who wrote the material.

    However…I do think there is some pretty blatant sexism in how dramatically people reacted to her criticism and how quickly she was labeled difficult, especially compared to some of the awful shit we see men get away with in this industry. On the other hand, that’s also just…exhibiting a lack of savvy because the reality is that as a woman in that industry, she should know how it works, as unfortunate it may be. She had the privilege of being white, which is an advantage, but she is also a woman. We know the double standards exists. You have to learn to navigate them smartly when you do not have the power, and at the end of the day, there will always been a thousand pretty blonde white women waiting to take your place in Hollywood.

  31. Barbiem says:

    Knocked off was exactly what the script portrayed it to be when she took it.
    Gurl bye. Try being a nurse. I wouldn’t mind a role on greys anatomy. I would Make more money pretending to be a nurse then actually being one.

  32. MandyLU says:

    I always thought the momager thing was weird and she is a bit of a brat but she isn’t any worse than so many men as others have mentioned and they didn’t get any backlash. A lot of this is sexist IMO. She seems like a good mom to me as well. I’m ok with her having a comeback. All the shit Shia did and he is just now facing consequences but she got cancelled for being a jerk?!

  33. observing says:

    I thought the way Seth Rogen complained about her was a little unusual. Usually actors stay out of commenting on other actors’ interviews,

  34. Leiticia says:

    There are BELOVED actors in Hollywood who are straight up rapists ped0philes & murderers but sure lets end Heigl and other women’s careers for being bitchy.

    This comments section is a sexist disaster. So many of you are part of the problem.

    • Bex says:

      How is her career ended? She consistently worked since all the Knocked Up “controversy”.

      She’s certainly had more opportunities than her contemporaries who are WoC.

      I mean, Sandra Oh was in a drought after she left Grey’s (and that was on GOOD terms) until she landed Killing Eve.

  35. Bex says:

    I just want to know how you choose to adopt a Black child and then choose to raise said child in one of THE WHITEST states in the country (that just so happens to be the headquarter of one of the most deliberately racist religious groups).

    • Maria says:

      Her husband’s brother was a founding member of Lady Antebellum (yes, they are close to him, in case anyone wants to disclaim that), which is not only a shockingly unconscionable sentimentality towards the slavery era but, also their name change to Lady A completely co-opted the legacy of singer Anita White.
      But love is love!! or something…

  36. Maria says:

    I think the hysteria over her is not warranted. And yes, she is held to an unfair double standard.
    But there’s another standard – she’s had more chances than any Black or POC actress accused of being “difficult” would ever have (and she basically publicly spit on the work of a prominent Black woman writer, as if it’s somehow easy for Black women in media), and honestly her career hasn’t ended even if she’s not A list (and that definition seems to be increasingly flexible these days since we haven’t had normal movie releases for almost a year).
    She’s still doing pretty well for herself. Netflix isn’t an easy place to score a show on, if I’m correct?

    • Bex says:

      She’s had more opportunities than the ones who don’t even have a bad reputation.

      If anything, she’s being treated just like the bad white dudes in that she still has her defenders and she still gets work.

      • Maria says:

        Yeah, I agree honestly.
        Actually, her comments about her child make me side eye her the most, much more than her past ones. The ones where she plainly admits she never even thought about racism or where she lived, presumably before adopting (yikes), because she thought “love is love” or whatever.
        We all come from places where we need to grow, but, uh, don’t adopt children in the meantime….

      • Xantha says:

        Yep. That’s the thing with white feminism that WOC like myself hates: How often white women forget that their whiteness will give them more advantages than any POC.
        And people saying that she shouldn’t have taken “Knocked Up” if she didn’t like the script were also pointing out that she had a steady acting gig to fall back on so she didn’t need a paycheck that badly. And this is already her third or fourth attempt at a comeback so she’s been given way more chances than a lot of people in Hollywood.

  37. Amelie says:

    Knocked Up was a terrible movie. There was nothing about that movie that I liked at all. I tend to dislike most Judd Apatow movies. They aren’t funny to me except to mostly white male dude bros. If you aren’t in that category and you find it hilarious, my apologies. But I was in college when Knocked Up came out and I really didn’t get the appeal and I didn’t think it was odd when Katherine Heigl complained about how her character was portrayed. She could have been a bit more tactful because I remember her comments were very blunt.

    As for the rest of it, I think some of it is deserved and some of it isn’t. She really was such a diva about her schedule and storyline on Grey’s and had she handled it differently, she could have had such a successful career post-Grey’s.

    • L4frimaire says:

      I remember when she did a cat commercial a few years ago and that blew up into a weird thing.

  38. Anne says:

    How is this a comeback? Wasn’t she in the last season or even two seasons of Suits after Meghan left?

  39. L4frimaire says:

    I saw the preview for her new show, and at first didn’t recognize her. I seriously thought she was Sara Ramirez ( another Grey alum). It looks like an ok show, kind of in the chick flick genre. She did come across as a bit ungrateful and difficult, but she was also correct in that the reaction was very sexist and punishing for her career. Reminds me in some ways to the reaction to Constance Wu. Someone who’s very talented, has a few hits, and then says things that come across as tone deaf or ungrateful while they’re still on the rise, which labels them as difficult. It has real impact in cutting a career short and ones income potential. If Heigl had said what she had said about , for example, Knocked Up, in hindsight, or had she been bigger or more established, the reaction may have been different. Always double standards for women and understand why she’s still upset about it.

  40. Lucy says:

    I have been labeled a difficult woman at work before (because I was a woman in construction) so I’m disposed to feel for her. What she said about Knocked Up was totally true, which is why it stung Rogen so hard.

    Publicly removing herself from the Emmys is where she crosses from difficult to unprofessional. If she didn’t like her ridiculous story lines, whatever, just don’t write an acceptance speech. Publicly embarrassing the writers and show and that you work with is a no. Take it up with them in person, not on E.

    My other beef is moving to Utah with her kiddos and not noticing how yogurt colored everyone there is. I’m white and Utah creeps me out because it’s so aggressively white. If you don’t notice that, fine, but don’t take your little kids who are going to have to deal with it there. And once she somehow figured out that gosh, everyone else is white, she’s still there with her kids that are going to get hurt.

  41. yeahso says:

    Knocked up was sexist and I didn’t enjoy it. BUT it was a movie and Rogen was a character so don’t see why he took it personally except if he identified with his character so felt butt hurt over her comments like a whiny kid even after sooo long.
    Today it is even more obvious how unfair and entitled his words were towards Heigl – the movie probably got more views and benefited from the drama. The backlash at Heigl was over the top and she was blamed for it because she wasn’t smart enough to play nice. Its unfair that women are judged so much harshly and by different standards. Happy she is getting another chance as she is an entertaining actor.

  42. Wilma says:

    But didn’t she continue to work? I always thought she just wasn’t good enough to have the Jennifer Lawrence career.

  43. Oatmeal says:

    I cant remember the last time someone let fame and success go to their head so hard that they fumbled the bag so spectacularly

    It’s one thing to be a one hit wonder or overnight sensation and just not quite hit that level of success again, but it’s another to be on track for a stable and successful career and just systematically fugg it all up

  44. Lucretius says:

    Ok there were some comments on race and racism here that I just had to address. First just because someone doesn’t follow you beliefs hook line and sinker and points out some concerns don’t equivocate them with Trumper‘s if you want allies you don’t dump them and lump them with another group. You want others to see the nuance in a situation you need to do so as well. (Plus though highly likely equating a Trumper with racism is highly prejudiced)
    Second
    Racism = Race Prejudice + Power racism is related to power so since power belongs to the white folks (and especially white men of a certain age) by its definition people of color cannot be racist to other poc’s— they can be prejudiced against them though and express race prejudice. Third Asian people are often very prejudiced against other Asians from different countries -just as much as they can be prejudiced against Blacks/African Americans it’s all very tribal it disheartened me when people equate their pain is being more or less than anybody else’s (Would you tell someone who’s been date rape that their pain is less than someone who was raped in an alley by an unknown assailant? Is one form of rape less problematic than the other?) we’ve all experienced difficulties- fighting against each other and saying my suffering is worse than yours might not be the answer as opposed to say we are all suffering let’s work together

  45. observing says:

    Wasn’t her character on Grey’s Anatomy having sex with a ghost at some point? If that was the case, I can see why she thought the writing was bad.

    She could have gone the more diplomatic route, but in cases like this I also feel like the media expects me to be more upset with the actress than I really care to be. There are so many weirder stories out there (i.e the Armie Hammer stuff) I can’t really get worked up in line with what maybe the media is expecting.

    • molly says:

      The Ghost Denny story was TERRIBLE.
      That being said, stories like this confirm my belief that the Grey’s set seems miserable. So many people leave abruptly or on bad terms. Not many folks seem close after they leave. Not that everyone needs to make lifelong friends with their co-workers, but working at a place like a Mike Schur show sounds infinitely more pleasant.

  46. mlouise says:

    any women who dealt with ‘consequences’ for years for their ‘mistakes’ in male dominated work environment knows it is what it is: overblown, insistance on making sure everyone knows an unforgivable (?!) mistake was made and should not be forgiven. The amount of mistakes most (white) men can put up with no one daring mentioning again….

    Just asking: Seth Rogen is not a difficult person? by which standards? is making sure by publicly saying and repeating a colleague is punished for saying something somewhat minor being a difficult colleague?

  47. JillyBean says:

    Seth rogan made disparaging comments regarding an Adam sandlot movie he was in called “Funny People” during an interview with Stern and nobody gave a flying fart about it.

    The double standard is exhausting

  48. mlouise says:

    excatly my point, when it’s a woman, same minor thing or comment is branded as an unforgivable mistake that should define her, a man, a comment- whether fair or not may be debatable, but will not be branded a defining and career breaker mistake…

  49. mlouise says:

    and talking about double standard- Armie Hammer can spiral into hurting people and cannibalism talks without fear of having his parents appointed his guardian…

    a woman shaved her her and you know what happened…

  50. Savannah says:

    Sounds like her mom was protecting her from the machine. She surely turned down many casting couches, and people (men) didn’t like that. Notice her meteoric rise stopped cold.

    Then there’s the whole part about calling out sexism. Of course a big no no before Metoo/Weinstein. Even now women have to tip toe around it. Personally, I was a fan of hers and I’m glad she’s back. She’s not always tactful, but aren’t we tired of expecting this from women?

  51. Dendenden says:

    But Harrison Ford can bag Star Wars, Rpatz can bag Twilight, jared Leto can send coworkers dead animals, Adam Driver can walk out of interviews….. etc etc.

    • phaedra says:

      Exactly! Men do it all the time and suffer no consequences for it. Heigl was treated worse than rapists in Hollywood. Is she a jerk? Well, she didn’t abuse, assault or rape anyone so she should be considered one of the best behaved people in Hollywood. The misogyny is mind blowing.

  52. Tweety pie says:

    I remember when all this was going down and she was a brat.
    She made Shonda jump thru Hope’s for her then she left in a hurry.
    Then after her career sank she would say wouldn’t say no to a Greys comback. Shonda said ,”no thank you.”
    The younger generation has to understand they are replaceable when it comes to Hollywood. There’s 2,000 more people breathing down your neck to take over. You’re self life is brief even when your popular.
    Look at Shia, Armie and next is going to be Adam Driver.
    Never get comfortable

  53. mlouise says:

    always going back to comparing having an opinion (KH) and being allegedly an abuser – these comments maintain the double standard

  54. mlouise says:

    always going back to comparing having an opinion (KH) and being allegedly an abuser – these comments maintain the double standard