Famecrawler
Has Candy Spelling Been Blacklisted?
Candy Spelling’s strained relationship with Tori, and her non-relationship with her grand kids, has been making plenty of headline over the past few months. Now, it seems that Candy might be feeling the backlash from her negative comments about her daughter and son-in-law. Has Hollywood banded together against loud-mouthed Candy?
From PopCrunch:
“Hardly anyone said hello, even though the room was filled with folks she knew. She’s not so well-liked anymore, and I think it’s due to all the nasty stuff she’s been saying about Tori and her family,” the source tattles. “You’d think by now she’d learn to keep her mouth shut.”
Candy recently accused Tori and Dean of using their children as “props” for their Oxygen reality show via an open letter. And, while I might agree with that appraisal a little bit, Candy’s certainly one to talk.
Her public rant, came in response to actually being invited to her granddaughter’s birthday party. So, how much more ridiculous and melodramatic can you get. Don’t RSVP if you don’t want to go.
Just like with the Travis Barker – Shanna Moakler feud, Candy needs to learn to keep her opinions off the internet — and TV.
Go Back To Famecrawler
1 Comment
Mel commented on Aug 28 09 at 10:29 pmCandy needs to start acting like the grandmother she IS, instead of like the toddler grandchildren she HAS. Learn to differentiate the two.
Add your take:
Note: Babble is a supportive, diverse community. We encourage a range of opinions,
but any unduly hostile comments will be removed.
Comments are delayed up to 15 minutes






Christopher Rogers
Monica Bielanko
Shana Aborn
Joanna Mazewski
Sunny Chanel
The Walt Disney Company supports Babble as a platform dedicated to honest, engaged, informed, intelligent and open conversation about parenting. However, the opinions expressed on this site are those of individual parents/writers and do not reflect the views of Disney. In addition, content provided on this site is for entertainment or informational purposes only and should not be construed as medical advice, diagnosis, treatment, or safety advice.

1