Kim Kardashian joined several other celebrities in wishing late night talk show host Jimmy Kimmel a happy birthday by reading mean tweets about him. The tweet that Kardashian read was particularly noteworthy because it was from none other than her husband, Kanye West.
Kimmel celebrated his birthday this week, and to celebrate it, the show gathered some very popular Hollywood personalities and asked them to read some very mean tweets about him. This is a version of the show's segment called "Mean Tweets," where celebrities usually read mean things that people tweet about them.
Kardashian read a tweet that her husband posted back in 2013 when he was in the middle of a feud with the light night show host. "Jimmy Kimmel put yourself in my shoes," read the tweet. "Oh no that means you would have gotten too much good p---- in your life."
Kardashian even added an ad lib note, saying "Good point, Kanye."
Fans will remember that the rapper was not very happy after Kimmel spoofed one of his interviews wherein he called himself the "number 1 rock star on the planet" and compared himself with Venellope von Schweetz from "Wreck-It Ralph." In the spoof, the comedian recreated the interview with kids.
Aside from Kardashian, celebrities like Jon Stewart, Halle Berry, Ray Romano, Jennifer Lawrence, Kristen Bell, Chris Hemsworth, David Letterman, and Stephen Colbert also joined in on reading some very nasty tweets about the late show host.
As for Kardashian and West, the couple is in a very good place in their relationship, and are expecting their third child to arrive via surrogacy in January. The couple is not exerting too much pressure on the surrogate mother, but are kept in the loop about how she is doing.
In an interview, Kardashian shared that surrogacy is harder than pregnancy in that she is not really in control of many things. "Obviously you pick someone that you completely trust and that you have a good bond and relationship with," she said. "Knowing that I was able to carry my first two babies and not my baby now, it's hard for me. It's definitely a harder experience than I anticipated just in the control area."














