Even for Bill Cosby Tone deaf R&B crooner R. Kelly hit a sour note by expressing his sympathy for the fallen funnyman.
"Well, my opinion on that is, I don't know what happened. I'm a fan of Bill Cosby's from the Bill Cosby
show, of course — who's not? And for me to give my opinion on something
that I have no idea if it's true or not, all I can say is that it was a
long time ago," the singer, whose real name is Robert Sylvester Kelly, told GQ in a wide ranging interview.
“I'm a fan of Bill Cosby's from the Bill Cosby
show. Of course. Who's not? And for me to give my opinion on something
that I have no idea if it's true or not, all I can say is that it was a
long time ago.
"And when I look on TV and I see the 70-, 80-, 90-year-old ladies
talking about what happened when they were 17, 18, or 19, there's
something strange about it. That's my opinion. It's just strange."
When pressed further, Kelly, whose real name is Robert Sylvester Kelly,
dismissed the whole scandal as "strange" and "something we can't
explain."
More than 50 women have come forward with detailed allegations they
were drugged and sexually assaulted by the "Cosby Show" star.
The 78-year-old Cosby is now facing his first criminal charge over an
alleged 2004 rape of a Temple University employee at his suburban
Philadelphia home.
The “Bump and Grind” singer has had his own share of sex scandals.
Kelly, 49, has been dogged for years by rumors he had sex with underage
girls. A jury found him not guilty in 2008 in the most notorious of the
cases, involving a 26-minute sex tape with an unidentified young woman
who appeared to be a minor.
The auteur who came up with "Trapped in the Closet" has long denied that the man on the tape is him.
Kelly said he is still giving Cosby the benefit of the doubt.
"If God showed me that they were telling the truth, I would say that's
wrong. I don't care if it was a zillion years ago," Kelly said.
"But God would have to do that, because God is the only one can show me
that. No man can tell me that. No woman can tell me that. And when you
wait 70 years, 50 years, 40 years, to say something that simple, it's
strange.
"You know why I say that is because it happened to me, and it wasn't true."
Last month, Kelly stormed out of an interview with the Huffington Post when a reporter pressed him on his sex scandals.
"When a person is found not guilty, they're found not guilty. And it
doesn't matter if it's a murder case, it doesn't matter what case it is,
when they're found not guilty, they're not guilty," said Kelly. "And I
think that a lot of haters out there wanted to see me go down."
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