Mary J. Blige Admits ‘I Used to Be a Monster’ — But Touré Says He Never Got an Apology | WATCH

*Mary J. Blige is once again trending after resurfaced comments about her past behavior sparked debate online — especially after veteran journalist Touré stepped in with a very personal counterpoint. In the clip now circulating, Blige openly reflects on her early career, offering a level of honesty that caught many fans off guard: “I used […] The post Mary J. Blige Admits ‘I Used to Be a Monster’ — But Touré Says He Never Got an Apology | WATCH appeared first on EURweb | Black News, Culture, Entertainment & More.

Mary J. Blige Admits ‘I Used to Be a Monster’ — But Touré Says He Never Got an Apology | WATCH
Mary J Blige - screenshot
Mary J Blige – screenshot

*Mary J. Blige is once again trending after resurfaced comments about her past behavior sparked debate online — especially after veteran journalist Touré stepped in with a very personal counterpoint.

In the clip now circulating, Blige openly reflects on her early career, offering a level of honesty that caught many fans off guard: “I used to be a monster.”

The Grammy-winning icon didn’t stop there. She explained that at a certain point, she consciously decided to make amends with people she had mistreated.

“I apologize to every last one of those people.”

Blige says that the shift happened around her No More Drama era, when she felt spiritually pushed to take accountability.

“Even bring people that you don’t know you did something to… I apologize to everybody.”

Touré: “She Never Apologized to Me”

But that claim is exactly where Touré pushes back — and his response is now fueling the viral conversation.

“She never apologized to me.”

Touré, who hosts and appears in the video (“Touré Show“) recounting the story firsthand, describes a troubling experience from the 1990s when he was assigned to profile Blige early in her career for The New York Times.

According to him, what was supposed to be a day of access turned into a tense and humiliating encounter. He recalls being dismissed during conversation, ignored throughout the ride to Yonkers, and eventually excluded from key moments — including being told he couldn’t join her and her friends in a limo gathering.

He also claims the situation escalated into a verbal outburst directed at him, leaving him stunned and embarrassed during what was supposed to be a professional assignment.

The experience, he suggests, stayed with him — especially now that Blige is publicly framing her past as something she fully addressed.

The disconnect between her public apology narrative and his personal experience is what’s driving much of the reaction online.

The Burger King Controversy Still Follows Her

The resurfaced clip also revisits another chapter in Blige’s career that continues to draw scrutiny — the backlash from her 2012 Burger King commercial.

At the time, the ad was widely criticized for reinforcing racial stereotypes, leading to swift backlash and its removal shortly after airing.

Blige has long maintained that the situation was mishandled behind the scenes.

“The whole way that went down was wrong.”

She pointed to failures from those around her.

“I had bad representation, bad management, bad everything.”

Even years later, she made it clear the moment still stings.

“It’s still not a laughing matter to me.”

Accountability vs. Memory

What’s unfolding now isn’t just about one artist’s past — it’s about how accountability is remembered, and by whom.

Blige is clearly acknowledging who she used to be, and she’s publicly claimed to have made peace with that chapter of her life. For many fans, that honesty is part of what has sustained her decades-long career and deep connection with audiences.

But Touré’s account suggests that closure wasn’t universal. His story adds a layer of complexity, reminding viewers that growth doesn’t always reach every person impacted along the way.

That tension — between public growth and private experience — is what’s turning this into more than just a viral clip. It’s a conversation about accountability, memory, and whether redemption can ever be fully complete.

Because while apologies can be powerful, they only resonate with the people who actually receive them.

Mary J Blige - screenshot
Mary J Blige – screenshot

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The post Mary J. Blige Admits ‘I Used to Be a Monster’ — But Touré Says He Never Got an Apology | WATCH appeared first on EURweb | Black News, Culture, Entertainment & More.