Reading Time: 3 minutes
Wendy Williams is speaking out.
Just days after begging for help from paparazzi and being whisked away in an ambulance to (apparently) pass a cognitive evaluation, sheâs giving an interview.
This isnât Wendy chatting on the street. She spoke on The View.
The talk show legend detailed her brief experience of freedom, the results of her psych test, and her frustration with her âluxury prison.â

How is Wendy Williams doing after her hospital trip?
Wendy Williams called in for a pre-taped interview on the Friday, March 14 episode of The View.
As you can see in the video below, she had a lot to say and was adamant about it. And thatâs good, because the panelists of The View had a lot of questions.
âI needed a breath of fresh air. I needed to see the doctor,â Wendy explained. âSo thatâs why I went to the hospital.â
Williams detailed that she had undergone bloodwork, for her thyroid. She has previously complained about not getting to see a doctor in years without someone else making the decision.
âIt was my choice to get an independent evaluation on my incapacitation,â she announced. âWhich, I donât have it!â
Williams went on to lament: âHow dare they say I have incapacitation. I do not!â While Joy Behar is not a neurologist, she did offer her opinion that Wendy Williams sounded just fine to her.

After the hospital, Wendy Williams went out to dinner
Ana Navarro then asked Wendy Williams about how she went out to dinner the same night as her hospital trip with niece Alex Finnie.
âIt was great at first⌠They got me at the hospital, and then â with permission from the guardian, of course â we left the hospital by ambulance,â the talk show legend described. âAnd we stayed [at the living facility] for about an hour, because we knew were going out to eat, just to celebrate life.â
Williams detailed: âWe went to Tucci, great dinner! There were paparazzi, so we stopped. Thatâs what I do. I stopped, posed, and these two people that work here⌠theyâre downstairs waiting for me.â Uh oh!
âIâm not permitted to do anything, but stay on this floor, memory unit,â Wendy Williams then summarized.
She went on to point out that the unit for those with memory problems is mostly for elderly patients, some of whom she describes as being 90 years old.
âIâm 60!â Williams pointed out. âWhy am I here?!â

This is all very complex
Obviously, we all want whatâs best for Wendy Williams. But there are reasonable questions about just what that looks like.
We only have her account on her cognitive evaluation. And in some cases of dementia and dementia-like symptoms, an evaluation on a âgood dayâ only provides part of the answer.
That said, so much about Williamsâ decline and legal (and financial) situation has been deeply unusual.
It is always worth reevaluation. In general, legal guardianships are not for adults who can coherently protest against the arrangement.