We already know Sunny Hostin of The View does not burn with the heat of the brightest stars in the universe.
From repetitively calling for reparations to finding out that her ancestors were most likely slave owners, Sunny Hostin has been part of a 10-year-plus run on The View. How she lasted this long is beyond us. How the show itself lasted this long is also beyond us, but the uninformed tune in daily to listen to these dimwits, their opinions and their divisive rhetoric, so here we are.
Just the other day, Sunny had a not-so-sunny view of neighborhoods that showed an outward display of patriotism. She shared this opinion post-COVID in 2021 as well and she thought to share it once again because it bears repeating: Sunny Hostin does not feel safe in neighborhoods with lots of American flags.
I said this on this show many, many years ago, because this is my tenth year on the show. I said there are times when I walk into a community and I see American flags all over the community and I suddenly feel unsafe because there’s a section of this country that has co-opted the American flag, and they equate being an American or an American flag with White supremacy and that should never be the symbol of White supremacy, but they have weaponized.”-Sunny Hostin
The comment came a moment after actress and guest host Michelle Buteau questioned why America’s 250th birthday was worth celebrating last weekend.
When you say this is the best nation — the best nation for who?”
Well, Sunny, the best for YOU, for one. Sunny Hostin lives in a mansion in a neighborhood of mostly-get this-WHITE people. Sunny Hostin attended Notre Dame Law School. Sunny Hostin’s son attends Harvard. Can you feel the utter oppression, here? Let’s talk about her oppression (COUGH) at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner a few years back:
Hostin first began feeling self-conscious as a girl growing up in New York City. ‘By the time I was 16, I was a double-D,’ says Hostin, whose struggles with her body image continued to evolve after she became a mom to son Gabriel, 20, and daughter Paloma, 16, with husband Emmanuel Hostin, 52, an orthopedic surgeon. ‘I couldn’t imagine my breasts would get bigger with childbirth – however they did.’ And her insecurities only mounted when she joined The View full-time in 2016. ‘My waist was small, but my top was so big I would wear a minimizer bra and a sports bra or a binder all the time,’ she says. ‘Or I would get a very large dress and then my stylist would put clips on the back of my dress so that everything would fit.’
Last April, as Hostin was getting dressed for the White House Correspondents’ Dinner, she zipped up her Toni Maticevski gown and was shocked to find that the dress’s bra didn’t fit. ‘I was crying,’ says Hostin, who wound up wrapping her chest in masking tape just to get by. ‘I sat there and didn’t eat anything. I couldn’t lift my hand because my boobs were going to fall out. [Musical group] Bell Biv DeVoe wanted to take a picture with me. I was like, ‘Oh God, they’re going to have these pictures of my boobs hanging out.’
On Aug. 22, 2022, Hostin underwent a breast reduction and lift, as well as liposuction on her waist and chin. ‘It’s not glamorous,’ says Hostin, who hired a private nurse to assist during her two-week-long recovery at home, which included drainage tubes to prevent blood and fluid buildup for three days, along with minimal scarring. “I was up and walking around in three days. I was back to work in two weeks, and I was doing Pilates in two months.” These days Hostin is happy and confident. “Now I prance around nude all the time at my house – I feel great,” says Hostin, who went from a G-cup to a C-cup. ‘I don’t know, you may see me naked on The View!'”-Jeff Nelson, People Magazine
But WE owe her reparations?! She cried. She was bound. She starved herself. Her body kept her in chains until she decided to pull the trigger on plastic surgery and a private nurse to help her through it all so she can feel better about her body image. The burden of her heavy boobs and extra baby fat from carrying children was lifted, y’all. We’re wondering if the surgeon sucked out some of her brain, too, but there was not much between those ears to begin with.
Because ‘Murica. I wonder if her plastic surgeon asked her if she “felt safe at home” before going under the knife?
I feel unsafe around people who commit Medicare fraud pic.twitter.com/5nkAUQ9iOu
— Marc Cocteaustan (@Igor_Cocteau) July 6, 2026
Sunny and her Medicare-fraud-surgeon husband live in one of the wealthiest zip codes of New York. Ahh, the perfectly manicured lawns of Westchester County! The American dream for some.
How about this neighborhood, those who gave their lives so this elitist can spin the hate. pic.twitter.com/31GD8oW5Pz
— Lyntay (@Lyntay7) July 7, 2026
Can I get an Amen here?
Something tells us that Sunny has this all wrong. Sunny Hostin is not talking about Zohran Mamdani’s New York, where she limos in and out of daily. Sunny Hostin is talking about small-town America. Main Street. Those communities that fly their flags proudly? Probably the safest communities in the country. Why? For one, they believe in something larger than themselves and their heavy boobs. Two, they will be polite and hold the door for you, say “please” and “thank you” and even greet you with a smile and some light conversation to be pleasant. Three, they believe in God and country and are, in general, happier and more generous because they do not see themselves as victims. Four, it’s very likely at least some of them carry so, those neighborhoods that Sunny thinks are “unsafe” are probably the safest in the nation!
American flags, like, all over the community make Sunny Hostin feel targeted and “unsafe”. Please, Dear God. Can we just drop her in Iran or North Korea for the day? Maybe Sunny can be Hostin’ a rage-bait, hate-filled show in one of those countries?
Let’s see how that works out for her.
Featured Image: The White House/Wikimedia Commons.org/cropped/Public Domain
She could move to Iran…get a feel for what unsafe really means!
Sunny would come completely unglued in my neighborhood. It’s white, black, brown, asian, native american, we’re the prime example of diversity. American flags everywhere. And Sunny, there’s more. There are guns. Lots of guns. We’d welcome you, but you don’t seem to want to visit. Oh well.
2 Comments