Terry Crews and his wife Rebecca King Crews have been married for 30-years and counting.
But their journey as a couple has been far from a smooth ride, in part, because of the Terry s admitted addiction to pornography.
And now the celebrity couple are telling their tales of broken trust and hurt, which nearly ruined their marriage and family, and the long road to recovery in a joint audiobook, Stronger Together.
Opening up: Terry Crews, 52, and his wife Rebecca King Crews, 55, opened up about the for NFL player s addiction to porn and how it almost ruined their marriage in a new audiobook, Stronger Together; they are pictured in January 2020
Hollywood actor/comedian, Terry Crews, has disclosed how his addiction to porn almost cost him his marriage to Rebecca King Crews. Speaking ahead of the re
The Everybody Hates Chris star recalled how he had a premonition about Farley s fate. I remember I was at his apartment, Rock continued. He was showing me his apartment. I leave, I see him out the window, and I was like, That s probably the last time I m going to see him . I knew.
SNL royalty: Rock reacting to a picture that featured the two of them with fellow Saturday Night Live alums Adam Sandler and David Spade
Sad: The Everybody Hates Chris star recalled how he had a premonition about Farley s fate
Rock remembered the camaraderie he shared with his SNL colleagues during their intersecting stints on the NBC series.
Chris Rock on the final times he saw friend Chris Farley alive msn.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from msn.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Chris Rock: Getting divorced made people look at me in a different light
As the comedian reveals his serious side he talks about therapy, cancel culture and how Hollywood is changing
8 May 2021 • 5:00am
Chris Rock on about therapy, cancel culture
and how Hollywood is changing at last for The Telegraph Magazine
Credit: Karl Ferguson
‘Is this it?’ comes a disembodied voice from a blank computer window. Even drained of the energy and octave-leaping animation familiar from stand-up stage, awards-show podium and cartoon franchise, it’s instantly recognisable.
‘How do I look? I can’t even tell… I need a shave,’ Chris Rock says, rubbing a lean jaw snowed with greying stubble, as his laptop camera switches on. With his thick-framed black glasses, the star behind the voice of Marty, the zebra in the Madagascar films, and best known here for blockbuster comedy specials like HBO’s Bring the Pain (1996) and Kill the Messenger (2008), Rock looks like a stylish middl