If she could, Whoopi Goldberg would gladly depart from The View.
The Sister Act actress, who is 69 today, has acknowledged that she cannot afford to do it, much like the majority of Americans.
“I wouldn’t be here if I had all the money in the world, okay?” “You know what, I’m a working person,” she said to the audience on the CBS talk show’s November 12 broadcast.
Although Goldberg’s most recent compensation is unknown, it was reportedly between $5 and $6 million in 2016.
“I understand that people are struggling.” I agree. After talking about Donald Trump’s second term and all the working-class Americans who mysteriously supported him, Goldberg remarked, “I work for a living.”
“My kid has to feed her family,” she clarified. My great-granddaughter’s relatives must provide for her. It’s difficult out there, I know.
If she could, Whoopi Goldberg would gladly depart from The View.
People frequently tell us, “This is what’s bothering me.” However, what annoys everyone shouldn’t be the same thing that endangers 85% of other individuals. That’s what we’re saying, I believe,” she clarified.
Grocers were upset with the Ghost store when she referred to them as “pigs” for the rising prices of food, which sparked the comments.
On last Thursday’s broadcast, she accused the people who own the grocery of being pigs and blamed them for the increase in supermarket prices.
Your financial situation is poor, not as a result of anything the Bidens did. Not because of a poor economy. According to Goldberg, “the reason your grocery bills are what they are is because the people who own the groceries are pigs.”
The Color Purple actress, whose mantra has been to never mention Trump’s name since he was elected president in 2016, is continuing to uphold this commitment.
‘That’s not going to change,’ Goldberg said following his victory last week.
Goldberg was disappointed that “people didn’t come out” to vote for Kamala Harris when she discussed the election results with her co-hosts.
In an interview with CNN’s The Axe Files in 2018, Goldberg acknowledged that she never calls Trump by name because she “can’t” bear to do so or refer to him as “President.”
Sunny Hostin, her 56-year-old co-host, went one step farther in her annoyance by blaming Latino men and white women.
However, the Sister Act actress, who turns 69 today, acknowledged that she cannot afford to do it, much like the majority of Americans.
“I wouldn’t be here if I had all the money in the world, okay?” On the November 12 episode of the CBS talk show, she informed the audience, “You know, I’m a working person.”
“I understand that people are struggling.” I agree. “I have a job,” Goldberg remarked during a conversation on Donald Trump’s second term in office. On October 18, 2024, viewed here
“This was a referendum on cultural resentment in this country, and I don’t think [Trump’s victory] had anything to do with policy,” Hostin stated.
“Last night, Black women attempted to save this nation once more.” What we lack are white women, who, according to my knowledge, voted for Donald Trump at a rate of roughly 52%. These women are ignorant.
“You have Latino men actually, voting more for him,” she continued.
“So why do you think uneducated white women are voting against their reproductive health freedoms, and why do you think Latino men voted in favor of someone who is going to deport a majority of his community?” she then questioned Rick Klein, the political news director for ABC.