Celebrity
John Tesh recalls bigotry when he dated Oprah Winfrey in the 70s
Oprah Winfrey’s ex-boyfriend John Tesh says the pair used to laugh off people who were bothered by their interracial relationship.
The “Entertainment Tonight” alum and Winfrey, 72, briefly dated in the ’70s when they worked at rival local TV stations in Nashville, Tenn.
Tesh, 73, exclusively tells Page Six that it was “very uncomfortable back then for an African-American woman and a very, very white guy” to be dating.
Tesh acknowledges that their relationship “was unusual in the South. My whole family grew up in the South, and so I was obviously aware of that.”
However, the pair refused to let it get to them.
“It became a joke between us,” he explains, “because we would work all day and then, like we really saw each other once a week, and she or I would say, ‘Hey, which restaurant do you want to empty tonight?’”
Tesh tells us it was clear from the very beginning that Winfrey was a star and destined for great things.
“We all knew that she was something special,” he shares, noting that he loved when they were assigned to cover the same stories. “It was like, ‘OK, this makes this a lot of fun.”
When asked if the A-lister was a good kisser, he jokes that “is such a Page Six question! I grew up with Page Six,” before admitting he doesn’t remember.
“I don’t even remember us kissing! We were really, really close friends,” he says.
But the relationship sputtered out due to their heavy workloads, and Winfrey moved on to Baltimore and then Chicago, while Tesh eventually made his way to New York and then Los Angeles, where he became the long-running co-host of “Entertainment Tonight.”
Tesh married “Hotel” alum Connie Sellecca in 1992 and share one daughter, while Winfrey has been in a relationship with Stedman Graham since 1986.
Tesh gave up his “ET” job in 1996 to concentrate on his burgeoning music career, which includes writing the now-iconic NBA on NBC basketball theme “Roundball Rock,” which he recently performed during the All-Star Game. His live concerts raised millions of dollars for PBS.
Tesh tells Page Six that in a good year, he earns “low six-figures” for the catchy ditty, and he can thank former sports executive Dick Ebersol.
“It was Dick Ebersol who decided to use the song back in 1990,” he recalled. “He said, ‘Hey, this is good, this is great. We’ll use this. Why don’t we play this for a while and put one of your kids through college?’ And so I said, ‘Okay, fine!’”
Besides music, Tesh also hosts a radio show, “Intelligence for Your Life,” which is heard on 350 stations.
Read the full article here
-
Music4 days agoHarry Styles finally addresses hairline rumors after years of speculation
-
Music4 days agoBritney Spears suffers wardrobe malfunction in dining room dance video
-
Entertainment4 days agoBaylen Dupree defends Tourette’s activist John Davidson’s BAFTAs racial slur
-
TV4 days ago‘RHOSLC’ star Mary Cosby feared son Robert Jr. would die just months before his death
-
Music7 days agoWiz Khalifa punches son in stomach 13 times during birthday tradition
-
Celebrity4 days agoSofia Franklyn savagely cuts Alex Cooper from cover of upcoming tell-all memoir
-
Movies6 days agoBAFTA winner Robert Aramayo defends Tourette’s activist who yelled racial slur at Michael B. Jordan
-
Movies5 days agoMeet the actor’s three children with late wife Nancy Dolman