
Aubrey O’Day opens the vault and hits play on your voicemails—raw, unfiltered, and burning with questions the courtroom won’t touch. From testimonies that shattered her own buried trauma, to decoding love that’s laced with control, Aubrey doesn’t just answer — she exposes.And when it comes to the string of untimely losses surrounding the Diddy world, Aubrey reflects on the questions being asked behind closed doors. While the courtroom stays silent, the public is starting to connect the dots. The whispers get louder, the truths get darker, and nothing is off limits.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Full Episode
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Amy and TJ presents Aubrey O'Day covering the Diddy Trial.
Hey guys, this is Aubrey from Amy and TJ Presents, Aubrey O'Day, me covering the trial. I really am so happy that you guys have been calling in and utilizing that hotline that we gave you. We got tons of voice messages, text messages into our hotline, and I definitely wanna go through a few of them today for you. I'd love to continue to answer any questions you have regarding the trial.
So why don't we take one of the messages?
Hi, Aubrey. My name is Nicole. I'm from Indiana. We've actually met a couple times in Chicago. I do have a question. I would just like to know what you went through in making the band because I have followed Danity Kane for years. And what are your emotional scars and trauma from this? And how do you heal from this? And I just want to thank you for covering this because the world needs to hear it.
Nicole from Indiana, that was such a thoughtful message. And thank you so much for having supported me since that long ago, two decades and some change. What did I go through on making the band? I mean, I experienced a pattern of emotional manipulation through grooming and
rituals of control, physical mistreatment that I can't necessarily get into the extent of, and I'm still trying to understand the extent of to this day so far. It was a deeply transformative period in which my sense of self as a woman was shaped through the gaze and influence of someone whose behavior we now understand was deeply rooted in darkness.
I'm trying to think, you know, I'm 41 now and I was a child when I started and I was systematically positioned as the scapegoat for the disillusion of Danity Kane and the decline of making the band and basically the whole franchise. And a narrative was crafted both allegedly internally and definitely absolutely publicly
And it painted me as difficult, not group oriented, and ultimately that I was a harmful person to business. And when you're in a position like that and branded like that on national TV, especially on MTV, which was kind of like the network to go to at the time.
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