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Kelly Osbourne shuts down rumours of Ozzy Osbourne's health: ‘He's not dying'

Kelly Osbourne shuts down rumours of Ozzy Osbourne's health: ‘He's not dying'

Time of India5 days ago
Kelly Osbourne
, the daughter of
Ozzy Osbourne
and
Sharon Osbourne
slammed the social media videos going viral about her dad's health, calling them AI generated.
The 40-year-old celebrity has lashed out on online rumors over her father's condition, specifically targeting an artificial intelligence (AI)-generated video that claims to be the Paranoid rocker discussing his impending death.
She said in a video shared to her Instagram Story: 'So, there's this video going around on social media, and it's supposed to be my dad, but it's AI.
'And it has a voice like my dad's David Attenborough or something. And it starts out saying, 'I don't need a doctor to tell me that I'm going to die. I know I'm going to die.'
'What the f*** is wrong with you people? Why would you spend your time making a video like this?
'He's not dying. Yes, he has Parkinson's, and yes, his mobility is completely different than it used to be, but he's not dying. What is wrong with you?"
She then shared a video which referred to a suicide pact that Sharon Osbourne, Ozzy's wife, previously claimed they had should either of them be close to death.
She said in another video: 'Stop making articles or posts about how you think my parents are having a suicide pact. That was bulls*** my mom said to get attention one time.
'And my dad's not dying. Stop."
The Black Sabbath lead vocalist has undergone seven surgeries and has been living with Parkinson's disease since 2003.
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'What is wrong with you people?' Kelly Osbourne reacts to rumors of her dad Ozzy 'dying'
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Mint

time3 days ago

  • Mint

'What is wrong with you people?' Kelly Osbourne reacts to rumors of her dad Ozzy 'dying'

Washington, DC [US], July 14 (ANI): TV personality and singer Kelly Osbourne slammed rumours that her father, Ozzy Osbourne, is "dying", reported the New York Post. Kelly posted a video on her Instagram Stories addressing online claims that her famous father is near death, amidst his various health struggles. "So, there's this video going around on social media, and it's supposed to be my dad, but it's AI," Kelly informed her fans, as per the outlet. "And it has a voice like my dad's David Attenborough or something," she said, adding, "And it starts out saying, 'I don't need a doctor to tell me that I'm going to die. I know I'm going to die.'" " wrong with you people?" Kelly added. "Why would you spend your time making a video like this?," according to the New York Post. The former 'Fashion Police' host clarified that Ozzy is "not dying," as per the outlet. "Yes, he has Parkinson's, and yes, his mobility is completely different than it used to be," Ozzy and Sharon Osbourne's daughter said, "but he's not dying. What is wrong with you?" She also reacted to the rumour that her parents had a "suicide pact," which Sharon spoke about over 15 years ago. "That..., my mum said to get attention one time," Kelly said, adding, "And my dad's not dying. Stop," reported the New York Post. In 2007, Sharon said, "Ozzy and I have absolutely come to the same decision. We believe 100 per cent in euthanasia, so we have drawn up plans to go to the assisted suicide flat in Switzerland if we ever have an illness that affects our brains." "If Ozzy or I ever got Alzheimer's, that's it - we'd be off," Sharon added, as per the outlet. Ozzy confirmed his Parkinson's diagnosis in 2020. He has also gone through multiple surgeries in recent years, including for a debilitating spinal injury in 2019, according to the New York Post. In November 2023, Ozzy said he has "at best 10 years left" to live, as per the outlet. Ozzy, who is now confined to a wheelchair, recently played his final concert with Black Sabbath at Villa Park in Birmingham, England, according to the New York Post. Kelly Osbourne is engaged to Sid Wilson. Wilson, who is a member of the heavy metal band Slipknot, proposed to Kelly during Ozzy Osbourne's final concert with Black Sabbath at England's Villa Park on Saturday, July 5. (ANI)

Kelly Osbourne shuts down rumours of Ozzy Osbourne's health: ‘He's not dying'
Kelly Osbourne shuts down rumours of Ozzy Osbourne's health: ‘He's not dying'

Time of India

time5 days ago

  • Time of India

Kelly Osbourne shuts down rumours of Ozzy Osbourne's health: ‘He's not dying'

Kelly Osbourne , the daughter of Ozzy Osbourne and Sharon Osbourne slammed the social media videos going viral about her dad's health, calling them AI generated. The 40-year-old celebrity has lashed out on online rumors over her father's condition, specifically targeting an artificial intelligence (AI)-generated video that claims to be the Paranoid rocker discussing his impending death. She said in a video shared to her Instagram Story: 'So, there's this video going around on social media, and it's supposed to be my dad, but it's AI. 'And it has a voice like my dad's David Attenborough or something. And it starts out saying, 'I don't need a doctor to tell me that I'm going to die. I know I'm going to die.' 'What the f*** is wrong with you people? Why would you spend your time making a video like this? 'He's not dying. Yes, he has Parkinson's, and yes, his mobility is completely different than it used to be, but he's not dying. What is wrong with you?" She then shared a video which referred to a suicide pact that Sharon Osbourne, Ozzy's wife, previously claimed they had should either of them be close to death. She said in another video: 'Stop making articles or posts about how you think my parents are having a suicide pact. That was bulls*** my mom said to get attention one time. 'And my dad's not dying. Stop." The Black Sabbath lead vocalist has undergone seven surgeries and has been living with Parkinson's disease since 2003.

Ozzy Osbourne, Bob Dylan, Jimi Hendrix: ChatGPT imagines the ultimate rock supergroup
Ozzy Osbourne, Bob Dylan, Jimi Hendrix: ChatGPT imagines the ultimate rock supergroup

Time of India

time09-07-2025

  • Time of India

Ozzy Osbourne, Bob Dylan, Jimi Hendrix: ChatGPT imagines the ultimate rock supergroup

Last week, the gods of rock descended on Birmingham to pay tribute to Ozzy Osbourne and Black Sabbath. On stage were Metallica, Guns N' Roses, Judas Priest, and members of Iron Maiden – a gathering of heavy metal's mightiest to honour the band that made them possible. S peaking to the audience before Paranoid, Osbourne hit a note of deep, unvarnished gratitude. 'Unfortunately, we've come to our final song … ever,' he said, pausing, sounding slightly forlorn. 'I just want to say to you on behalf of the guys in Black Sabbath and myself, your support over the years has made it all possible for us to live the lifestyle that we do. Thank you from the bottom of my heart. I love you; we love you. ' It wasn't the first time legends assembled to honour a fallen titan. When George Harrison died, the Concert for George brought together Eric Clapton, Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, Tom Petty, Jeff Lynne, and even Harrison's son Dhani to celebrate his life in music. They didn't just play songs; they recreated an era, a civilisation built on guitar strings and poetic defiance. But let's conduct a final thought experiment. Suppose ChatGPT could ignore mortality, ego, and record label rivalries. What if it could conjure the ultimate rock supergroup – not just the Beatles or Sabbath reborn, but every rock god sharing a stage, their combined sound tearing open spacetime itself? Welcome to The Electric Doom Requiem – Extended Universe Edition. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Fully Loaded 4 BHK apts for 4.49 Cr(All Incl)* in Sec 104 ATS Triumph, Gurgaon Book Now Undo Lineup Vocals Ozzy Osbourne – The Prince of Darkness whose eerie melodies and haunted wails birthed heavy metal. Bob Dylan – The ragged prophet whose lyrics cut deeper than any guitar solo. Bon Scott – The blues-rock rebel who sang sin with a smirk and a whiskey bottle. Tom Petty – The heartland storyteller grounding chaos in human melancholy and hope. Freddie Mercury – The operatic angel turning riffs into liturgy with cathedral-filling vocals. Lead and Rhythm Guitars Jimi Hendrix – The psychedelic shaman bending spacetime with every wah-wah drenched solo. Tony Iommi – The architect of doom metal whose riffs are hammer blows of darkness. Jimmy Page – The mystic conjurer summoning eastern scales and occult blues from his strings. David Gilmour – The existential poet whose solos are silent prayers echoing in eternity. Eric Clapton – The blues purist whose clean phrasing bleeds raw human feeling. George Harrison – The quiet Beatle whose slide guitar bridges earthly pain with cosmic peace. Keyboards Jon Lord – The gothic architect whose organ runs build baroque cathedrals behind metal's thunder. Bass John Entwistle – The stoic thunder whose technical brilliance anchored The Who's chaos. Paul McCartney – The melodic genius whose basslines redefined songwriting itself while adding harmony warmth. Drums John Bonham – The primal force whose fills felt like tectonic shifts under your feet. Ringo Starr – The humble swing master who always served the song with groove and grace. Why does this work? Because rock and roll was never about neat categories, market-friendly packages, or polite jam sessions. It was – and remains – a glorious mess of poetry, rebellion, philosophy, filth, transcendence, and doom. This lineup is not a band. It is a pantheon. Ozzy brings darkness. Dylan brings prophecy. Bon Scott brings sleaze. Tom Petty brings storytelling. Freddie Mercury brings grandeur. Hendrix brings psychedelic transcendence. Iommi brings doom. Page brings mysticism. Gilmour brings existential beauty. Clapton brings blues purity. Harrison brings spiritual serenity. Jon Lord brings gothic majesty. Entwistle brings stoic power. McCartney brings melodic optimism. Bonham brings primal brutality. Ringo brings swing and humility. Imagine them on stage. Hendrix and Gilmour weaving solos so beautiful they make the crowd weep, Iommi and Page thundering beneath. Clapton and Harrison trading blues and slide licks. Bonham and Ringo creating polyrhythmic storms, Entwistle and McCartney laying down basslines thicker than tectonic plates. Ozzy howling, Dylan prophesying, Bon Scott rebelling, Petty comforting, Mercury ascending above it all. No stage could hold them. No PA system could contain them. No universe could survive them. But that is the point. Rock, at its peak, made you believe impossible things – that words could change the world, that chords could rip open your soul, that a scream into a mic could become a prayer heard by gods. This supergroup is that impossible thing made manifest. Music not as entertainment, but as ritual, rebellion, requiem, and resurrection all at once. As Ozzy once sang in Paranoid: 'Can you help me occupy my brain?' This band doesn't just occupy your brain. It tears it apart, rewires it, and hands it back so you can hear the universe sing in every note.

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