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Sharon Osbourne doesn't have a #MeToo story, and she's making sure other women who work for her don't either. The talk show host, who's married to rocker Ozzy Osbourne, says she's worked diligently over the years to protect women she employs from predators.
"Men take advantage. They always have and they always will," she told The Mirror in a November 2023 interview.
She then acknowledged "the amount of men that have worked for me that have been looking for those young girls."
Keeping clicking for more on Sharon's comments and to find out why she doesn't think she personally has ever been on the wrong side of a #MeToo moment…
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Sharon Osbourne thinks she's "too threatening" to have a personal #MeToo story.
"I've never wanted to be shown as vulnerable. When I started, there were no other women managers in this genre," she said, referring to when she managed husband Ozzy Osbourne's music career. "It's tough. That's why people go, 'She's so this, so that.' But you have to be, otherwise, people eat you up. It's survival."
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In her November 2023 chat with The Mirror, Sharon Osbourne recalled one particular employee who was often the object of male attention.
"[One employee] has worked for me for years," she said, "and the times I have fired men taking advantage of her, abusing her, and trying to ply her with drink."
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Sharon Osbourne's November 2023 comments came after she accepted husband Ozzy Osbourne's Icon Award at the Rolling Stone U.K. Awards in London. The Black Sabbath frontman was unable to travel from Los Angeles to London due to his ongoing health issues.
In a recent interview with Rolling Stone U.K., the singer spoke about death, revealing he doesn't think he has a decade left to live.
"I don't fear dying, but I don't want to have a long, painful and miserable existence," he said. "I like the idea that if you have a terminal illness, you can go to a place in Switzerland and get it done quickly. I saw my father die of cancer."
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Ozzy Osbourne, who was diagnosed with Parkinson's disease in 2003, and wife Sharon Osbourne committed to a mutual physician-assisted suicide pact should one of them become mentally and physically incapacitated. "I don't want it to actually hurt," Sharon said on the Oct. 10, 2023, edition of her family's "The Osbournes" podcast. "Mental suffering is enough pain without physical. So if you've got mental and physical, see ya," she told her children when son Jack Osbourne asked if the pact still stands.
"But what if you could survive?" daughter Kelly Osbourne asked her mom. "Yeah, what if you survived and you can't wipe your own a**, you're p****** everywhere, s*******, can't eat?" retorted the host of "The Talk" U.K. edition.