Pamela Anderson opened up about the “yucky” moment involving Seth Rogen at the 2026 Golden Globes. The actor revealed that seeing him in the audience brought up unresolved feelings connected to the Hulu series Pam & Tommy.
Pamela Anderson talks about Seth Rogen at Golden Globes
Anderson attended the Golden Globes to present the award for Best Actress in a Motion Picture Musical or Comedy. However, the experience was marred when she spotted Seth Rogen in the audience. She revealed on Andy Cohen’s SiriusXM show that the source of her discomfort traces back to Pam & Tommy. The biographical series was about her stolen sex tape scandal with then-husband Tommy Lee, which Rogen executive-produced.
“Seth Rogen, he did that [series] without talking to me, you know Pam & Tommy, and that was another — I just felt like, ‘Eh.’ You know?” Pamela Anderson recalled. She expressed frustration, “Like how can someone make a TV series out of the difficult times in your life, and I’m a living, breathing human being over here, hello.”
When Cohen asked if their paths crossed, Anderson confirmed, “he was in the pit at the Golden Globes so we were close.” She described the feeling as “yucky” and reiterated her hope for an apology, though she added, “not that that matters.”
Cohen suggested an apology might “mean something,” leading Anderson to say, “Well, you are free game. When you are a public person they say you have no right to privacy. But your darkest, deepest secrets or your tragedies in your life shouldn’t be fair game for [a] TV series. That pissed me off a little bit,” she explained, calling it “the worst time in my life.”
Pressed on her reaction upon seeing Seth Rogen, Pamela Anderson admitted to a mental confrontation. “So, I didn’t make a beeline for him, but in my mind, I did. And really told him how I felt. So I’m sitting there in my seat just going — you know?” she said, mimicking a hard stare. Despite the unresolved feelings, she concluded philosophically: “I mean there’s worse things going on in the world” (via People).
Originally reported by Devanshi Basu on Mandatory.
