David Zitzerman
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Right.
So we know that public figures have less privacy now.
than private figures.
So for example, if the Prime Minister of Canada has an affair, you know, CTV News can have a story about that, or Chorus can have a story on the radio, and that would be considered to be a matter of public interest.
If my next door neighbor has an affair, who's a dentist,
Very good.
Or a prosthodontist who lives next to me.
That's not news.
So some of it has to do, obviously, whether you're a public figure or your private figure.
But generally speaking, even public figures have the right to, you know, certain elements of privacy.
So they have less privacy, but they still have an element of privacy as well.
I think the answer is no from a legal standpoint.
In other words, could she say I had a bad sex life with my husband?
Sure.
She could probably say that.
On Real Housewives, I think every second housewife talks about that, right?
So, you know, that kind of a thing she could probably say.
But when you get into kind of intimate personal details, in this particular case, I understand there were comments on the size of the manhood of her ex-husband, whether there could be surgery to correct it.
I mean, you know, that's really granular details that are unnecessary.
And that's where it crosses the line.