03/10/2026
Candace Owens GOES OFF On Ellen For Being Involved With Diddy!
The cameras switch on, and Candace Owens doesn’t hesitate. She opens by saying that the public is done pretending Hollywood is just glitz and glamour. Every time controversy surrounds powerful figures in the entertainment industry, the same names seem to circle the conversation — not because of confirmed crimes, but because of proximity, power, and influence.
This time, the internet has linked discussions around Sean “Diddy” Combs with Ellen DeGeneres.
Candace immediately makes something clear. Ellen DeGeneres has not been charged with crimes related to Diddy. There is no verified evidence that she engaged in criminal conduct with him. But their shared presence within elite Hollywood circles has fueled online speculation, and Candace says the real story isn’t about declaring guilt — it’s about examining the culture that allowed powerful networks to operate without scrutiny for so long.
She explains that for decades, daytime television, music moguls, film studios, and fashion elites all moved within overlapping social environments. Red carpets, private events, award shows, fundraisers — these weren’t isolated industries. They were interconnected.
Candace argues that when controversy hits one powerful figure, people naturally start asking how far the social web extends. Not because every person connected is guilty — but because elite insulation has been exposed before.
She leans forward and says that what frustrates her isn’t one photograph, one party, or one dinner. It’s the instinct in Hollywood to shut down conversation the moment it becomes uncomfortable. When audiences ask questions about who knew what, or how certain relationships functioned, the response is often silence or dismissal.
Candace says that response only fuels suspicion.
She brings up how Ellen DeGeneres has previously faced criticism over workplace culture on her show — a controversy entirely separate from Diddy — and how that moment shifted public perception of celebrity personas. The lesson, Candace argues, is that public image doesn’t always reflect private reality.