• The 57th Annual GRAMMY Awards - Backstage & Audience

The 57th Annual GRAMMY Awards - Backstage & Audience (Photo : Getty Images)

The last time someone spoke negatively of singer Taylor Swift, actor and musician Jared Leto filed a lawsuit against entertainment website after he commented on Swift’s “1989” album. Now, Wendy Williams just added her voice to the feud between Swift on one side, and the couple Kanye West and Kim Kardashian on the other side over Swift granting West permission to rap some lyrics about her.

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Wendy noted that until now, Kim has not released a video footage of Swift allegedly giving her approval to Kanye to use the lyric, “I made that bitch famous.” She pointed out that what was exposed was only Kanye talking to Swift about the song – which Kim shared on her Snapchat on Sunday night.

“What he didn’t tell her is that the last line, I made the B-famous,” pointed out Wendy. But she explained that similar to the “N” word, some black people use it among themselves and it is cool sometimes, “Sometimes you don’t mind being called the ‘B’ in the right context.”

Swift, in an Instagram post, insisted that the video of Kanye telling her he would call her “that bitch” in his song did not happen. “It doesn’t exist because it never happened.” She added that she wanted to like the song and Swift was counting on Kanye playing the song for her, but he never did.

Meanwhile, Entertainment Weekly reported that Joseph Khan, director of Swift’s three videos – “Bad Blood,” “Blank Space” and “Wildest Dreams” – joined the growing voices against Kanye and Kim. He cited the death of Nicole Brown Simpson, the wife of O.J. Simpson, tweeting that it is not the first time the Kardashians supported “the murder of an innocent blond woman.” Kim’s late father, Robert Kardashian, was part of Simpson’s legal defense team.

Kardashian supporters criticized Kahn for the comparison, but he states, “no one knew what a Kardashian was until they supported the murderer!”