Friday’s episode of Tamron Room, Jessica Simpson argued about an involuntary advantage of publicly discussing her sexuality, as disrespectful as she found it: a “long line” of curious suitors. In a 2010 interview, Mayer described Simpson, with whom he dated for about a year, as “sexual napalm.” Simpson wrote in his memoirs: Open book, who considered the way he discussed it to be “in the most degrading terms” and had to answer questions about those terms in interviews for years.
“Talking sexually about anyone is disrespectful, but that’s him,” he told Hall.
However, he added with a laugh: “What he did was he definitely gave me a long line of guys. A lot of people knocked on my door … I think I might think I would like to, but I’d rather someone come after me through my heart or see something more in me than the world. “
Hall asked Simpson about Mayer’s recent one claim that he “almost cried five times” as he watched Framing Britney Spears. After the FX / Hulu document was released, Justin Timberlake released a half-thirsty audience sorry to Spears (as well as Janet Jackson). Hall wondered if Simpson thought Mayer should follow Timberlake’s example and apologize for his treatment of Simpson. In Open book, Simpson describes their relationship as “unhealthy” and Mayer as “manipulative.”
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“No, I definitely don’t feel like I owe them public apologies,” Simpson said. “Unable to recover”.
“I wouldn’t expect an apology, I don’t think an apology is needed because I feel like people end up finding their way to let you know they feel it,” Simpson said. “And I think maybe he won’t regret it and that’s fine.”
From her speculations that Mayer may not regret it, we can deduce that she did not reach Simpson after she wrote about their relationship in so much detail in her book. A particularly insightful example:
I was a pet bird. He threw me into the sky and saw me catch my breath and go back long enough to mean something when he pulled a gun out of his back pocket to shoot me, with the expert goal of grazing a wing, never killing a shot to finish. with misery. To think that every time he lay on the ground, broken and bewildered, he spent his time walking. Watching me write down notes and hum a new song of sadness.
And every time I “found” myself, I looked at him, grateful to have been welcomed, sorry for the problems he must have caused him.
I wish I had left at that point. I do not. I was so wrapped up that in twenty minutes it was all in accordance with his terms “wait and see”. I felt inevitable to be in love with John, so I kept talking to him for months. I told friends I was “back” with him, and they were overwhelmed with emotional bandages. But I knew now that I wouldn’t let him get close enough to bring me down again. This bird did not return to the cage, no matter how much he needed a song.
Is it like that a great book. Simpson’s current press cycle is tied to his recent pocket release.