Sunny Hostin of 'The View' hit with mockery after saying she hasn't been in a supermarket since COVID: 'This is a mental illness'



Sunny Hostin, a co-host on "The View," faced online ridicule when she revealed that she had avoided going into grocery stores since the pandemic and instead had delivery people go in her place.

The hosts were discussing their shopping habits when Hostin made the admission on the show Wednesday.

"I don’t like a supermarket. I haven't been in a supermarket since COVID — for about three years," she said.

"That's when I discovered Instacart. And I give them a big tip because they don't always pay their people well. And it’s — So, that’s been an issue I think for the company," Hostin continued. "But man, you can get toiletries, you can get fire logs, you know, those big Bounty towels you don't want to carry."

Many on social media thought Hostin, who is a millionaire, was expressing how out of touch many on the left are with regular Americans.

"This is a mental illness, @sunny. Really. Its not healthy. I say this with someone with empathy for your situation," tweeted Pradheep Shanker of National Review.

"So she's scared of COVID, but totally willing to let one of the poors risk their life on her behalf. *chef's kiss*," tweeted Mark Hemingway.

"So according to her logic… it’s okay to put someone else at risk but not herself? Seems pretty selfish if you ask me," read another popular tweet. 

"I'm so afraid of COVID that I have the butler and maid hosed down with disinfectant twice a day. It's expensive, but I'm worth it," joked another user.

Hostin was also among the hosts who angrily blamed racism and sexism for a report that some Democrats were rejecting Vice President Kamala Harris for the Democratic nomination in 2024.

Here's the video of Hostin's comments:

What Does Your Grocery Order Say About You? | The View www.youtube.com

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Sunny Hostin of 'The View' ACCUSES Nikki Haley of trying to hide her heritage



"The View" co-host Sunny Hostin accused Nikki Haley of not leaning into her heritage because she goes by her middle name — Nikki.

Guest and political pundit Alyssa Farah Griffin was asked who might successfully challenge Donald Trump in 2024. Griffin mentioned Nikki Haley as a potential candidate, but Hostin jumped in and slammed the notion.

According to Hostin, Nikki is a "chameleon" who does not "lean into" her heritage enough to run for president.

"Stu Does America" host Stu Burguiere explained that Nikki's heritage had been a "central part" of Nikki's story. A story that Stu believes would be hailed by the ladies of "The View" as inspirational" if Nikki wasn't conservative. Haley's given name is Nimrata Nikki.

Nikki clapped back on Twitter: "Thanks for your concern, @Sunny. It's racist of you to judge my name. Nikki is an Indian name on my birth certificate—and I'm proud of that. What's sad is the left's hypocrisy towards conservative minorities. By the way, last I checked, Sunny isn't your birth name…."

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Nikki Haley fires back at racial attack from 'The View' co-host Sunny Hostin: 'It's racist of you to judge my name'



"The View" co-host Sunny Hostin racially disparaged Republican Nikki Haley on Tuesday, suggesting Haley intentionally hides her Indian heritage.

Wait, what?

While speaking about potential 2024 presidential candidates, co-host Alyssa Farah Griffin said she wants to see "new blood" in the Republican Party.

When pressed on which Republicans are both conservative enough to secure the Republican nomination, but moderate enough to compete in a general election, Griffin suggested Haley as one such individual.

"Nikki Haley, the chameleon," Hostin interrupted.

"I think Nikki Haley was incredibly effective as the governor of South Carolina," Griffin responded.

"What is her real name, again," Hostin followed up.

"A lot of people don't go by their actual name," Griffin noted. "I don't want to mispronounce it — it's Indian."

"I think if she leaned into being someone of color, this would be different," Hostin shot back, suggesting Haley runs from her ethnic heritage.

Will Biden Run For Reelection in 2024? | The View youtu.be

Later, Griffin defended Haley — whose legal name is Nimrata Nikki Haley — by correctly noting that Haley has gone by "Nikki" since her childhood.

"Nikki Haley has gone by 'Nikki' since she was a child — it's documented," Griffin pointed out. "I wouldn't be shocked that as an Indian woman growing up in South Carolina at that time, she actually did it to avoid prejudice."

But Hostin only doubled down.

"There's some of us that can be chameleons and decide not to embrace our ethnicity so that we can pass, so that we don't have to worry —" Hostin said before co-host Sara Haines interjected.

Haines, in fact, exposed the hypocrisy of Hostin's criticism, pointing out that Hostin also doesn't use her legal first name: Asunción.

Cornered by this inconvenient fact, Hostin then excused herself from exactly what she criticized Haley for by claiming most Americans cannot correctly pronounce her Hispanic name.

"Most Americans can't pronounce 'Asunción' because of the under-education in our country," Hostin claimed.

Report Says California Governor Will Run If Biden Doesn’t | The View youtu.be

How did Haley respond?

The former United Nations ambassador called Hostin "racist" for her disparaging comments — and highlighted the double standard Hostin employed.

"Thanks for your concern @Sunny. It's racist of you to judge my name. Nikki is an Indian name and is on my birth certificate—and I'm proud of that," Haley said. "What's sad is the left's hypocrisy towards conservative minorities.

"By the way, last I checked Sunny isn't your birth name…" she pointed out.

\u201cThanks for your concern @Sunny. It's racist of you to judge my name. \n\nNikki is an Indian name and is on my birth certificate\u2014and I'm proud of that. \n\nWhat's sad is the left's hypocrisy towards conservative minorities. \n\nBy the way, last I checked Sunny isn't your birth name\u2026\u201d
— Nikki Haley (@Nikki Haley) 1663694086

'The View' host says she explored suing Trump because family members died from COVID: 'I blame the Trump administration for that'



"The View" co-host Sunny Hostin admitted Thursday that her family strongly considered suing former President Donald Trump because members of her family died from COVID-19 complications.

What happened?

While bashing Trump for his response to the COVID-19 pandemic, which the panel agreed was motivated by politics, co-host Joy Behar asked why Americans are not suing Trump for the deaths of their loved ones.

Shockingly, Hostin admitted that her family has, in fact, considered suing Trump.

“My family has thought about this a lot, especially because Manny’s parents died from COVID," Hostin said, referring to her husband. "And I blame the Trump administration for that."

When Behar asked Hostin, who is a lawyer, whether she can sue Trump, Hostin replied, "We’ve explored it. We’ve explored it— we’ve thought about it."

However, Hostin did not explain what liability Trump has for the death of her parents-in-law or how Trump bears responsibility for their deaths. In fact, COVID-19 is a virus that triggered a global pandemic, and is attributed to killing millions of people around the world. It is not clear how one person could be held legally liable for deaths stemming from a highly transmissible virus.

#TheView's @sunny reveals she has "explored" suing the Trump administration because her in-laws died of Covid.\n\n"I blame the Trump administration for that."pic.twitter.com/FlZDZyGc5f
— Mediaite (@Mediaite) 1649345946

Hostin's admission came during a segment in which the panel discussed a recent interview between CNN+ host Chris Wallace and Dr. Anthony Fauci. In that interview, Fauci said that working with Trump administration officials during the pandemic became "untenable" and claimed they had "declared war" on him because he "kept on telling the truth."

The panel, of course, received Fauci's claims as gospel, and agreed Fauci was the Trump administration's "scapegoat."

Stephanie Grisham — who served as White House communications director and press secretary from July 2019 to April 2020 — also claimed that "a lot more lives could have been saved," claiming Trump was most concerned with the political ramifications of the pandemic.

Dr. Fauci Calls Messaging Under Trump Admin “Painful” | The View www.youtube.com

Mystery over strange animal no one could identify — and that 'went berserk,' broke out of cage, and escaped from shelter — has been solved



Remember that mystery animal that was grabbing headlines a few weeks back?

Not only because nobody could figure out exactly what it was, but also because PhillyVoice reported it "went berserk" in a western Pennsylvania shelter, "demolished" its cage, climbed shelves, and "chewed" window seals before escaping back into the wild.

Well, the mystery has been solved thanks to a completed DNA test.

The staff was waiting on DNA to determine if he's a dog or coyote before he made his escape.https://fox8.com/news/pennsylvania-rescues-mystery-animal-pulls-off-elaborate-escape/\u00a0\u2026
— fox8news (@fox8news) 1643402064

'The results are in!'

A Valentine's Day post on Facebook from Wildlife Works — which had been taking care of the creature until it busted out of the joint sometime between closing time Jan. 26 and when it reopened the next day — provided the great unveiling.

"The results are in! Our 'mystery animal' DNA sample came back," the post read. "100% coyote!"

What's the background?

The male animal began making headlines in mid-January after a woman found him near her home in Westmoreland County, Philly Voice said, adding that the animal then was taken to Wildlife Works — a Youngwood non-profit that rehabilitates and releases distressed animals. The creature's fur showed visible signs of mange.

The "coyote" was taken to the animal rehabilitation center after a Pennsylvanian woman found it on her property last week.https://foxbaltimore.com/news/local/mystery-animal-found-by-pennsylvania-woman-escapes-wildlife-shelter\u00a0\u2026
— FOX Baltimore (@FOX Baltimore) 1643697000

Then on the morning of Jan. 27, a Wildlife Works staff member arrived at the shelter to find it partially ransacked, with trash strewn all over, PhillyVoice said, adding that there were scratch marks on the walls, a window's seal and screen were torn apart — and the mystery animal's cage was open and empty.

The creature had escaped, WJW-TV reported.

"The crate was just demolished. The hospital room was demolished. He had clambered up on a set of shelves and then reached over — this was no easy feat, let me tell you — he managed to stretch over to a window," Beth Shoaf, Wildlife Works' executive director, told PhillyVoice at the time. "These windows are high at the top of the walls. They're not windows you look out of, you know? And he chewed the window seals to force the window open — and out he went!"

Mystery animal that might be a dog escapes from Pennsylvania rescue.https://www.upi.com/Odd_News/2022/01/27/mystery-animal-escapes-Pennsylvania-rescue-Wildlife-Works/5711643313699\u00a0\u2026
— Sunny Days \ud83c\udf1e (@Sunny Days \ud83c\udf1e) 1643897489

Shoaf added to the outlet that "nobody in the world thought something like this could happen. He was half-dead."

PhillyVoice noted that a Wildlife Works Facebook post — which has since been deleted — said the group is upset the animal escaped:

He never acted aggressive or distressed, and there had been no evidence of escape attempts. We had him for about a week, during which time he ate nutritious food and received treatment for his mange and secondary infections. We can only guess he was starting to feel somewhat better and decided it was time to go.

Hopefully those of you who know Wildlife Works know this is NOT [our] standard of care, and will understand how devastated we are — not just for ourselves but for that poor creature out there in the cold again struggling to survive.

Shoaf told the outlet she took down the Facebook post with the photos after Wildlife Works was "deluged" with comments — most positive, but some hostile. PhillyVoice said one person threatened to come to the shelter and hunt down the animal.

She also noted to the outlet that the shelter is trying to lure the animal back and has set traps in hopes of recovering him, but there has been no sign of the animal since his escape.

Mystery animal awaiting DNA results escapes rescue facility | NewsNation Primeyoutu.be

'Thinking he is long gone'

When Wildlife Works was waiting for DNA results, Shoaf told PhillyVoice the shelter received many guesses regarding what exactly the mystery animal is.

"Everything from an abused greyhound to Chupacabra. Seriously. There were lots of people that thought it might be Chupacabra," she told the outlet, in reference to the mythical creature said to drink goat blood. "The only place I ever saw Chupacabra was on 'Scooby Doo,' and it didn't look like a dog."

As for the coyote's whereabouts, Morgan Barron — a wildlife rehabilitator at the shelter — told TribLive, “Still no sightings ... thinking he is long gone."

Animal experts investigate mystery animal Pennsylvania woman found outside homeyoutu.be

Mystery animal rescued from wild 'went berserk' in shelter, 'demolished' crate, climbed shelves, 'chewed' window seals — and escaped. But what is it?



A mystery animal — possibly a coyote, possibly a dog, maybe a combination of the two, or perhaps something else entirely — "went berserk" in a western Pennsylvania shelter one night last week, "demolished" its cage, climbed shelves, and "chewed" window seals before escaping back into the wild, PhillyVoice reported.

The staff was waiting on DNA to determine if he's a dog or coyote before he made his escape.https://fox8.com/news/pennsylvania-rescues-mystery-animal-pulls-off-elaborate-escape/\u00a0\u2026
— fox8news (@fox8news) 1643402064

Say what?

The male animal began making headlines in mid-January after a woman found him near her home in Westmoreland County, the outlet said.

The animal was being housed at Wildlife Works, a Youngwood non-profit that rehabilitates and releases distressed animals, PhillyVoice noted, adding that the creature's fur showed visible signs of mange.

The "coyote" was taken to the animal rehabilitation center after a Pennsylvanian woman found it on her property last week.https://foxbaltimore.com/news/local/mystery-animal-found-by-pennsylvania-woman-escapes-wildlife-shelter\u00a0\u2026
— FOX Baltimore (@FOX Baltimore) 1643697000

The shelter also sent out blood samples from the animal for DNA analysis, which takes several weeks, the outlet said.

Then last Thursday morning, a Wildlife Works staff member arrived at the shelter to find it partially ransacked, with trash strewn all over, PhillyVoice said, adding that there were scratch marks on the walls, a window's seal and screen were torn apart — and the mystery animal's cage was open and empty.

The creature had escaped, WJW-TV reported.

"The crate was just demolished. The hospital room was demolished. He had clambered up on a set of shelves and then reached over — this was no easy feat, let me tell you — he managed to stretch over to a window," Beth Shoaf, Wildlife Works' executive director, told PhillyVoice earlier this week. "These windows are high at the top of the walls. They're not windows you look out of, you know? And he chewed the window seals to force the window open — and out he went!"

Mystery animal that might be a dog escapes from Pennsylvania rescue.https://www.upi.com/Odd_News/2022/01/27/mystery-animal-escapes-Pennsylvania-rescue-Wildlife-Works/5711643313699\u00a0\u2026
— Sunny Days \ud83c\udf1e (@Sunny Days \ud83c\udf1e) 1643897489

Shoaf added to the outlet that "nobody in the world thought something like this could happen. He was half-dead."

PhillyVoice noted a Wildlife Works Facebook post — which has since been deleted — said the group is upset the animal escaped:

He never acted aggressive or distressed, and there had been no evidence of escape attempts. We had him for about a week, during which time he ate nutritious food and received treatment for his mange and secondary infections. We can only guess he was starting to feel somewhat better and decided it was time to go.

Hopefully those of you who know Wildlife Works know this is NOT [our] standard of care, and will understand how devastated we are — not just for ourselves but for that poor creature out there in the cold again struggling to survive.

Shoaf told the outlet she took down the Facebook post with the photos after Wildlife Works was "deluged" with comments — most positive, but some hostile. PhillyVoice said one person threatened to come to the shelter and hunt down the animal.

She also noted to the outlet that the shelter is trying to lure the animal back and has set traps in hopes of recovering him, but there has been no sign of the animal since his escape.

Mystery animal awaiting DNA results escapes rescue facility | NewsNation Primeyoutu.be

Name that animal...

While Wildlife Works waits for DNA results, Shoaf noted to PhillyVoice that the shelter has received many guesses regarding what exactly the mystery animal is.

"Everything from an abused greyhound to Chupacabra. Seriously. There were lots of people that thought it might be Chupacabra," she told the outlet, in reference to the mythical creature said to drink livestock blood. "The only place I ever saw Chupacabra was on 'Scooby Doo,' and it didn't look like a dog."

PhillyVoice readers have said the animal is a Mexican hairless dog or a coydog, the outlet noted.

"I did not realize how many species of hairless dogs there are," Shoaf added the PhillyVoice. "There's something called a Xolo [another name for a Mexican hairless] and there's a dhole. It was very enlightening."

Animal experts investigate mystery animal Pennsylvania woman found outside homeyoutu.be