This week, Kris Jenner appeared on The Late Late Show WithJames Corden, where she said — while hooked up to a lie detector — that she had nothing to do with leaking Kim Kardashian and Ray J's sex tape.
The test was administered by polygraph expert John Grogan, who determined that Kris was telling the truth during the segment.
But now, Ray J is maintaining that Kris was the "mastermind" behind the tape and has called out the manager — and John — in a scathing series of posts. "We did it," Ray J said in a 20-minute video on Instagram.
Ray J even claimed that there were multiple different sex tapes — and Kris picked the one that was released because it was "better" and gave Kim a "better look than the second one."
"You watched it, and made a decision," Ray J said. "Then, you get on whatever show and take a lie detector test with a fraud." The singer went on to claim that John doesn't have a license and uses "someone else's."
In a separate Insta, Ray J posted negative articles and videos about John and wrote, "John Grogan is a fake. He is not a polygraph examiner. He is quite accurately known as the polygraph parasite."
"I don’t know what the fuck you think this is, but you have fucked with the wrong person," Ray J said. "You done fucked with the wrong Black man."
“I was just gonna handle this shit legally, right, and just hit you in court and just get what I’m deserved from all of y’all being foul and trying to defame me, trying to make me look bad, when YOU know what’s up.”
Ray J's main takeaway is that he's done being villainized by the sex tape storyline. He said romantic partners don't trust him because of his reputation following the leaked sex tape with Kim. He also said he had to defend himself to the board of his own company, Raycon, following the recent episode of The Kardashians where the tape was discussed.
He also pointed out that the Kardashians never sued him — only the CEO of the porn production company Vivid Entertainment, Steven Hirsch.
THEN — yes, there's more — Ray J shared old texts between him and Kanye, where the two discuss the tape and the "contracts" between him and the Kardashians following the tape's release. Ray J alleges that Kim and Kris signed his name for him, and that Kanye was trying to get any remaining sex tapes back, along with this faulty contract.
Ray J then told Kanye via text that Kris "brokered" the deal.
Then, Kanye started sending him models and fashion pics, which was random and confusing for Ray.
Then, Ray J revealed his DMs with Kim during the time when the sex tape was a storyline in the new Hulu series in April 2021. In a separate 48-minute-long video, he shows viewers that it's Kim's verified account and reveals the messages where he called out Kim. "You know what we did," Ray J wrote in multiple all-caps messages.
Kim responded, explaining the situation and how the following episodes depict the now-infamous moment where Kanye returns the computer with the alleged remaining tape.
After, Ray J then sent multiple messages, and Kim said she spoke with her team and would make a statement that clarified Ray J had no plan to release any of their additional footage 20 years later:
Kim said she wanted no drama with Ray J and to move on from the tape. Ray J told viewers he's still being villainized on the show.
It looks like the two actually left off on good terms. This is the last DM we saw in the video. I guess it was Kris' recent lie detector segment that triggered Ray J to share all these messages and information.
SO...TL;DR Kris Jenner went on James Corden's show and claimed she had nothing to do with releasing the sex tape, which was deemed "true" by a polygraph expert, who Ray J says is fake. Ray J said Kris did, in fact, orchestrate the whole thing. Ray J said he never planned to release the tape and showed DMs and messages with him and Kim and Kanye because he's tired of being villainized on the show and in media.
That's the bulk of it. However, there is A LOT in these videos. You can watch the full video here, and the second video here.
Affluent Americans may want to double-check how much of their bank deposits are protected by government-backed insurance. The rules governing trust accounts just changed.
Former NBA guard Darius Morris has died at the age of 33. He played for five teams during his four NBA seasons. Morris played college basketball at Michigan.
It’s key to note that we’re not saying the “best team” or “best roster.” Instead, we’re talking about the best confluence of factors that can outline a path for survival and then success.
Jake Mintz & Jordan Shusterman discuss the Padres-Marlins trade that sent Luis Arraez to San Diego, as well as recap all the action from this weekend in baseball and send birthday wishes to hall-of-famer Willie Mays.
Miami Heat president Pat Riley rebuked comments Jimmy Butler made about the Boston Celtics and New York Knicks, while also implying that his star needs to play more.