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Sharon Osbourne, like Piers Morgan, has been disguising cruelty as 'straight talk' for years - Insider

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  • Sharon Osbourne is caught in the media storm surrounding Piers Morgan after she defended him.
  • Like Morgan, she's been disguising bullying as "straight talking" for years.
  • Anyone who's watched her on "The X Factor" knows that bullying is part of her DNA on-screen.
  • Visit Insider's homepage for more stories.

"She's unpredictable ... You never know what she's going to say."

That's what Sharon Osbourne's former fellow "X Factor" judge Louis Walsh said about her in one of the numerous compilations available on YouTube of Osbourne's "hilarious" interactions with some of the British talent show's more hapless contestants.

That kind of language has long been used to describe Osbourne and her friend Piers Morgan, with whom she judged on "America's Got Talent," the American edition of Simon Cowell's "Got Talent" franchise. They're not afraid to speak their minds. They won't apologize for having opinions. And if you have a problem with that, f--- you, snowflake!

But their tactics don't work both ways.

When Morgan was finally called out for his repeated attacks on Meghan Markle, he walked off the set of his morning show and promptly quit. Osbourne defended Morgan, and when her "The Talk" cohost Sheryl Underwood radically suggested that Morgan's criticisms might be rooted in racism, Osbourne broke down in tears. "How can I be racist about anybody?" she said.

British people have long known that Osbourne is a bully

OCTOBER 31: Members of the "The X Factor" Louis Walshe, Sharon Osbourne and Simon Cowell pose with the award for Most Popular Talent Show at the National Television Awards 2007 held at the Royal Albert Hall on October 31, 2007 in London, England. (Photo by Jon Furniss/WireImage)
The "X Factor" members Louis Walsh, Osbourne, and Simon Cowell in 2007.
Jon Furniss / WireImage / Getty Images

What people in the US might not know is that Osbourne, like Morgan, has made a career out of being a bully. There are many examples — more of which have come out in the wake of the reckoning on "The Talk" — of Osbourne's "brutal honesty" straying into malignant cruelty.

This knowledge is etched into the collective subconscious of Great Britain who watched Osbourne on "The X Factor" during most of the early 2000s.

One need only watch her and Walsh falling apart laughing at a contestant while teasing her for being overweight. Or look back to a 2006 interview in which she said she sent Tiffany boxes filled with her own excrement to people she disliked and had been doing so "for an awfully long time." Or hear her say with a laugh in a 2010 interview that Susan Boyle looks like a "hairy a--hole."

More recently, Osbourne described firing an assistant for not having a sense of humor after she forced him to go back into a burning building to save her artwork. She also said she took his oxygen mask off and put it on her dog.

In the late '90s and early '00s, reality-TV shows were the Wild West. That was especially true in the UK. The more outrageous you could be, the better, and Osbourne quickly cemented herself as one of the UK's biggest — and meanest — stars.

When Osbourne was announced as a host on "The Talk," Eric Spitznagel wrote for Vanity Fair that he would watch the show "solely because Sharon Osbourne is a co-host, and any time Sharon Osbourne is on live TV, there's a chance somebody is going to get slapped, covered in a hot beverage, or called a whore."

Sadly for Spitznagel, the world of TV has moved on.

Mainstream TV no longer has a place for these 2

As I write this, Osbourne's brutal-honesty gig on "The Talk" is on hiatus pending an internal investigation triggered by her outburst at Underwood.

That's what happens now when people in the spotlight make inappropriate jokes, reveal prejudice, or behave unprofessionally — they're taken off the air, and repercussions are swift. Just look at what happened with Gina Carano and Disney's "The Mandalorian."

It's not about cancel culture, as Morgan and Osbourne would have you think. It's about being held accountable.

"The Talk," Friday, February 19th, 2021 on the CBS Television Network. Sharon Osbourne, shown. Guests: Storm Reid and Ross Butler. (Photo by Monty Brinton/CBS via Getty Images)
Osbourne on "The Talk."
Monty Brinton / CBS via Getty Images

"People forget that you're paid for your opinion and that you're just speaking your truth," Osbourne tweeted at Morgan after his exit from "Good Morning Britain."

Osbourne's idea of her and Morgan's "truth" is not what viewers deem true anymore. The UK's communications regulator, Ofcom, received 57,000 complaints about Morgan's rants against Markle, setting a record.

Morgan and Osbourne are much like the royal family they defend: relics of the past refusing to change with the times.

Both are likely to bounce back in some capacity. Rupert Murdoch's upcoming "opinionated" News UK venture and Andrew Neil's GB News, where right-wing voices will be given a more sympathetic platform, are rumored to be in a £10 million bidding war over Morgan.

But the past few weeks have shown one thing: Mainstream TV as we know it no longer has a place for these two.

Unfortunately, somewhere else will.

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Sharon Osbourne, like Piers Morgan, has been disguising cruelty as 'straight talk' for years - Insider
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