She added that people can get “alerts on when they go up” by “text KATHY to 345345.” “Most of my library is going up on iTunes over the next few months!” (Photo by Randy Holmes/ABC)Īlthough Kathy now has the rights, the show is not yet on iTunes, though some of her comedy specials are. Kathy Griffin on Jimmy Kimmel Live in 2016. So I’m very proud of that.” When My Life on the D-List will be available in full again So yes, I got the whole library back and it’s up on iTunes, and so I get very flattered when people tweet me and say, you know, I liked this episode of the D-List. “I’m 58 years old and I thought if I’m not gonna, stand up for something then sit down. Every episode of My Life on the D-List, every one of my 23 specials, now, 24 and the two seasons of my talk show and they’re gonna to be available and I know, years of legal wrangling.” “I am very excited because I actually bought back my entire library. In a SiriusXM interview WEdnesday, Kathy told host John Fugelsang this, according to a transcript from the network: My Life on the D-List hadn’t quite disappeared the first four seasons have been available on DVD:Īlthough Variety said it had an “exclusive” story about this on Friday afternoon, Kathy previously talked about this on SiriusXM a few days earlier.
It differentiated itself from other celebrity series by seeming to just dip into Kathy’s life, and even though she was certainly being performative, it felt far less stagey than shows like The Osbournes-though it got more contrived in its later seasons. The show aired from 2005 to 2010, following the life of the comedian and Celebrity Mole winner, including her staff her hilarious parents Maggie and John and her husband turned ex-husband, Matt. “I now own everything I’ve ever done,” she told Stephen Colbert on Friday night’s episode of The Late Show. Full episodes of the Bravo show Kathy Griffin: My Life on the D-List will soon be streaming and available to watch online, after Kathy Griffin bought all six seasons and 47 episodes of the reality show-plus two seasons of her talk show-back from Bravo, following “years of legal wrangling,” she said in a radio interview.