The Spin

Khloe is protecting her peace and setting healthy boundaries after years of supporting someone who never valued her. She's choosing herself for once, and fans are applauding her strength.

The Tea

Insiders say Khloe was already simmering over Lamar's documentary comments when he allegedly doubled down in a follow-up interview Rob Kardashian sent her—essentially confirming the marriage was a fame play from day one.

The Receipts

On the April 29 episode of 'Khloe in Wonder Land,' she told Kris Jenner: 'The bridge is burned and I have no more rope left to throw over.' She also revealed Lamar allegedly said, 'That marriage made me more popular in the social media world' in an interview after the doc dropped.

The Last Byte

Lamar Odom spent years benefitting from the Kardashian machine while allegedly harboring resentment. Now he's learning what happens when you bite the hand that kept you alive.

Khloe Kardashian just drew an unmistakable line in the sand, and Lamar Odom is on the wrong side of it. On the April 29 episode of her "Khloe in Wonder Land" podcast, the Good American founder addressed the fallout from Netflix's "Untold: The Death & Life of Lamar Odom" directly with her mother Kris Jenner—and she didn't hold back. "The bridge is burned and I have no more rope left to throw over," Khloe, 41, told her mom flatly.

"Period." She also made clear she expects her family to follow suit, warning Kris: "We're not talking to him anymore. 'Cause sometimes I know how you can get." The breaking point? Lamar's own words in the documentary, where he admitted he was "trying to f--k" Khloe the night they met at a 2009 party hosted by his Los Angeles Lakers teammate Ron Artest.

But that's just the appetizer. According to Khloe, after the doc premiered on Netflix, Lamar did press appearances where he allegedly doubled down on their marriage being a calculated move for fame—and her brother Rob Kardashian was kind enough to send her the receipts. "He was like, something along the lines of, 'Yeah, that marriage made me more popular in the social media world,'" Khloe recalled during the podcast.

"I don't think he would care really about me, clearly." She added that she found it rich Lamar seemed so concerned about losing his relationship with her family—Kris Jenner especially—while apparently having zero problem torching her specifically. "But me, he was playing me from the beginning of the doc," Khloe fired back. "It's not like he is only doing bad press about me.

He sat down and gave bad interviews about me in the documentary." Let's be clear about what that documentary actually revealed: Lamar Odom married Khloe on September 27, 2009—just one month after they met—after proposing with a nine-carat diamond ring. In the film, he nonchalantly said of their whirlwind romance, "You gotta have some big balls." Meanwhile, his ex-fiancée Liza Morales—who shares two children with him—didn't even know about the wedding until Lamar texted her about it.

When she told him she thought he was joking, he apparently didn't correct her. And here's where things get genuinely ugly. Khloe spent years covering for Lamar's drug use, cleaning hotel rooms "so housekeeping didn't sell a story" and pumping his stomach after multiple overdoses—including the near-fatal incident at a Nevada brothel in October 2015 that left him on life support.

She put visitation at the hospital "on lockdown," authorized every person who could see him, and when his father Joe Odom reportedly wanted to take him off life support in exchange for Nikes and $100, Khloe stepped in as his wife and refused. So imagine her reaction when she later caught Lamar smoking crack in the bedroom of the house she'd rented for his recovery—and punched him in the face.

"By Monday, you need out of this house," she told him at the time. "I'm done, I'm not paying for a thing, and I never want to speak to you again." That was nearly a decade ago. Apparently nothing has changed.

Kris Jenner, for her part, insisted during the podcast that she'd "not made a phone call" to Lamar and would "not do anything like that without telling you first or asking you what you wanted me to do in a situation." But Khloe wasn't having it: "It's not happening. There is no situation," she repeated—twice, for emphasis. A source close to Lamar told E!

News that he did press appearances for the documentary "because it was part of his agreement" with Netflix and that he's "consistently acknowledged Khloé's support during one of the hardest periods he's faced." But here's the thing: Khloe doesn't see it that way. And given everything she sacrificed—her health, her sanity, her dignity—it's hard to argue she's wrong for finally being done. The man she kept alive is out here admitting their marriage was a social media strategy.

That's not drama. That's betrayal on record.

📰 Sources

E! News