Bill Belichick's daughter-in-law has made her feelings about Jordon Hudson known.
Jennifer, who is married to Steve Belichick, responded to a comment on the account for the "Dudes on Dudes" podcast with Julian Edelman and Rob Gronkowski.
Edelman and Gronkowski argued that this situation is being blown out of proportion, saying she was just acting as any PR person would.
And comedian Nikki Glaser responded to the post, writing, "100% this. She's acting as his publicist. Publicists do this during interviews. People are out for blood.
However, Jennifer's account responded to that comment, writing, "@nikkiglaser publicists act in a professional manner and don't 'storm' off set delaying an interview."
All the drama centers around CBS's Tony Dokoupil asking Belichick how he and Jordon Hudson, his 24-year-old girlfriend, met during a CBS Sunday Morning interview. Hudson then walked straight into the interview and put an end to that line of questioning.
“We’re not talking about this,” she said.
There have been multiple reports since this. One was by TMZ, reporting that Hudson even stormed out of the room during the interview, delaying it for 30 minutes.
Belichick has since released a statement stating that the agreement about the interview was "to focus solely on the contents of the book." He accused CBS of not honoring this during the interview.
"After this occurred several times, Jordon, with whom I share both a personal and professional relationship, stepped in to reiterate that point to help refocus the discussion. She was not deflecting any specific question or topic but simply doing her job to ensure the interview stayed on track," Belichick wrote (via Albert Breer). "Some of the clips make it appear as though we were avoiding the question of how we met, but we have been open about the fact that Jordon and I met on a flight to Palm Beach in 2021.
"The final eight-minute segment does not reflect the productive 35-minute conversation we had, which covered a wide range of topics related to my career. Instead, it presents selectively edited clips and stills from just a few minutes of the interview to suggest a false narrative - that Jordon was attempting to control the conversation - which is imply not true," Belichick added.
CBS then posted a statement responding to this.
"When we agreed to speak with Mr. Belichick, it was for a wide-ranging interview. There were no preconditions or limitations to this conversation. This was confirmed repeatedly with his publisher before the interview took place and after it was published," a CBS News spokesperson said.
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