Lizzy Savetsky, who will star in the “Real Housewives of New York City” reboot, has broken her silence on her cryptic exit about Brynn Whitfield's surprising behavior in the Season 15 finale.
The 39-year-old activist confirmed in an exclusive interview with Page Six that she was leaving the Bravo show following her explosive fight with Whitfield's “bogus members.”
Savetsky told us of her former co-star, “You're just going to be able to cover up how verbose you can be.”
Two years after Savetsky exited, Whitfield feuded with another co-star: Ubah Hassan.
In the finale, Whitfield claims to her various forged members that Hassan realized she had been raped, [was] Still, “Nonetheless,” Trauma used it against her as she said she slept with men going forward.
Still, just hours later, the Fact star backtracked on her stance and claimed that, despite telling Hassan the secret, the model may not have “got the clock on her” during the emotionally charged chat.
“I've never been shocked to hear this,” Savetsky said of what happened between Whitfield and Hassan, including that she and the mannequin had a connection to their shared experiences.
“I stand behind Ubah and I'm glad her life didn't ruin that,” Savetsky told us.
“Ubah is Muslim and I am Jewish, and we didn't have a very loving conversation. She is a special person and seeing something like this actually broke my coronary arteries.”
The social media influencer opined that Hassan was “very emotional” when speaking to her, with the model's man admitting that she “needs to be successful, but doesn't need to reopen old wounds.”
“She said to me 'Lizzy, you're proven,' but I wasn't looking for it but listening to that,” Savetsky said.
Savetsky was just weeks into filming her first season of “Housewives” in 2022 when she spat on camera with Whitfield, 39, as she was determined to just be Jewish matchmaker.
“Because I was so anxious about the continuity of my people, I wanted to arrange Jews with different Jews,” Savetsky explained.
“According to Orthodox Judaism, Judaism is mom's. If you're not [a Jewish woman]your children are caught up in the Jewishness. ”
She claimed that Whitfield, who was black and half white, was frustrated by this rationalization and drew racist parallels between Savetsky and the Jewish oppressors, the Nazis. sex. Still, she admits her former co-stars in no way accounted for this period.
“She said I looked like these people who had done these terrible problems to my people,” Savetsky said.
“I am so frustrated with the fact that manufacturing simply saved the roll when everyone knew about the anti-Semitism I had been experiencing. I had been so involved that this scene would create additional anti-Semitism ”
Representatives for Whitfield and Bravo declined Page Six's request for comment.
Still, sources familiar with the state of affairs tell us that Whitfield's closure is that Savitki allegedly said she was building these with “pure” blood, something the biracial reality star took as a jab.
Insiders were unable to review the exact phrase allegedly used by the Jewish activist and could not provide support for the statement.
Savetsky responded: “This is a despicable accusation. I define [that] The foundation of Orthodox Judaism is that Judaism is inherited from mom.
She continued: “I used to build Jewish men on the time they arranged with Jewish ladies, not on ladies looking for Jewish husbands.”
“I told her she was now free to reach whoever she needed, but my interest in tie-ins immediately connected with my anxiety about Jewish continuity. I really identified on Digicam that our current Jewishness is greater than the Holocaust The earlier Jews were much less numerous.”
In a second offering, Lizzy reiterated the influencer's model of the occasion by alluding to the fact that the issue wasn't the exact feud at hand, accusing Page Six of calling Whitfield a Nazi.
After the fight, the two women were instructed to settle on variations of their names off-camera.
Savetsky claimed that Whitfield allegedly told her throughout the cell phone conversation, “Next time you say one thing that's unkind, I'm going to say you call you the N-word,” but that “the full statement phrase.”
Savetsky heard the alleged risk, as the phone was on the speaker, and her husband, Dr. Ira Savetsky, took over and yelled, “You got into our F -King Family. You will weaponize us against our beliefs. I cannot consider this.”
Lizzy said a government producer on the road tried to undercut the state of affairs by claiming Whitfield was “making an analogy”. A second supply called Whitfield “in no way threatening” to Lizzy on Page Six.
Despite this, Lizzy believes: “I wasn't protected before [by Bravo]. As offended as I used to be by this fake member, I used to be even more offended by the manufacturing industry. It's not a secret that I used to get all this anti-Semitic hate, so to hear these fake members do this to me and never do anything about it, is horrible. ”
During the heated name-calling, Lizzy said Whitfield started bashing and “went into victim mode.”
“She was the Nazi I was compared to, rolling out the exact N-word [into the conversation] Then started crying. ” she said.
After deciding, Lizzy and her husband were set to do the scene at their house, but told the on-set producers that they wanted to reschedule to spend time relaxing.
When recounting what happened in that decision, the IRA repeated the exact N-word.
Lizzy said: “It was a total ownership mistake and it's the only time I've ever heard him say that.”
“He only said it was inappropriate when quoting her. It was just the warmth of the second time, trying to work through what happened simply.”
Supply tells us the IRA's restatement of phrases made many producers feel “uncomfortable,” including: “He shouldn't be free to freely exploit the N-word, especially when it comes to people of shade [on set]. ”
Lizzy claimed she was “basically fired” for the incident – though the community didn't get “a penny” from Bravo to use that term since she was technically on contract.
She also claimed she was asked to announce her determination to leave – which she did.
“I can't hold on,” Lizzy wrote via Instagram on November 16, 2022.
“As a proud Orthodox Jewish girl, I believe participating in this order could be a great way to symbolize people like me and share my expertise.”
She continued: “Sadly, from the time I announced during the falsification process, I had been on the receiving end of a series of anti-Semitic attacks. As this continued, I noticed that this path was not right for me and my family. ”
Supply, who is used to the state of affairs, told Page Six that, in addition to earlier public assertions, Lizzy's nailing her exit on something was “exactly the fact that she was going to twist reality, exactly what she accused Brynn of doing.” matter.
Lizzy concluded: “At the end of the day, I hold myself accountable more than anyone else. I move on. I would never do that.”
The activist, who worked with numerous anti-Semitic organizations, secured a ruling from Mayor Eric Adams and was honored by the Knesset, the Israeli parliament, for his work defending Israel online “Voice of Iron” Award. She was “so happy” that Whitfield's spitting happened.
“I don't know if I would have had the energy to walk on my own while I'm living my normal life now,” she said. “After all I've seen, I'm so grateful that I'm not part of this gift.”