ROSEANNE BARR’S EXPLOSIVE NEW INTERVIEW: “I WAS CANCELED BEFORE CANCEL CULTURE EXISTED

Five years after her career imploded over a single tweet, the controversial comedian is breaking her silence with startling revelations about the 2018 scandal that made her a cautionary tale.

The Tweet That Ended Everything

On May 29, 2018, Barr compared Obama aide Valerie Jarrett to an “ape” in a since-deleted tweet. Within hours:

  • ABC canceled the “Roseanne” revival after just one season

  • Her talent agency dropped her after 30 years

  • Co-stars like Sara Gilbert publicly condemned her

  • The incident became shorthand for “career suicide”

Barr’s Unfiltered Defense Today

In her first in-depth interview about the fallout, Barr claims:

  • The tweet was “a stupid joke about Iran, not race” (Jarrett is Iranian-American)

  • She was under the influence of Ambien at the time

  • “They wanted me gone anyway because of my politics”

  • The network paid her $33 million severance to avoid lawsuits

The Industry Blacklist

Since the scandal:

  • No major network will work with her

  • She moved to a Hebrew-speaking commune in Israel

  • Makes occasional podcast appearances

  • Supports herself through stand-up comedy tours

“Nobody in Hollywood returns my calls,” she admits. “But I sleep fine knowing I didn’t bend the knee.”

The Unexpected Silver Lining

Barr says exile freed her:

  • Wrote a bestselling memoir “Loud & Proud”

  • Launched her own streaming platform

  • Found new fans among anti-cancel culture audiences

  • “I say whatever I want now with zero f-cks given”

Could a Comeback Happen?

Industry insiders say no:
“Her name still triggers instant backlash,” says one network exec. “That tweet permanently defined her legacy.”

Yet Barr remains defiant: “They’ll all beg me back when they need ratings