
Are cancelled celebrities finding ways to make money from the reason they were cancelled in the first place? Seems so.
This exact topic was discussed on the latest episode of The Spill, as hosts Laura Brodnik and Kee Reece debated whether it's ever okay for celebrities to profit from their cancellations.
The subject came up after a former Vanderpump Rules star, Faith Stowers, set up a GoFundMe page to sue her ex-costar, Stassi Schroeder. She's raising funds for legal fees for “justice against Stassi,” as she claims that Schroeder made false claims about her in her book Off With My Head: The Definitive Basic B***h Handbook to Surviving Rock Bottom.
Listen to the episode of The Spill here. Post continues after podcast.
In the book, Stassi speaks about being cancelled and fired from Vanderpump Rules in 2020. The cancellation began during the Black Lives Matter movement, as it came out that Stassi and castmate Kristen Doute had called the police on Stower, along with falsely accusing her of a crime, in response to a cheating scandal.
Stassi's career took a nosedive briefly, but it's currently thriving. She's enjoying a sold-out nationwide live tour for her podcast Straight Up with Stassi which launched in 2015.
"It sounds like she's taken this [cancellation] and made it into a personal hardship that she's had to overcome. She's rebranded herself as a survivor," Laura said on The Spill.
Kee spoke about how the cancellation had little effect her career path. "She's arguably back at the top of her game by 2023. So less than three years from cancellation to rising from the ashes," she said.