Pamela Anderson Calls Golden Globes Moment With Seth Rogen ‘Yucky’

Pamela Anderson Calls Golden Globes Moment With Seth Rogen ‘Yucky’
Pamela Anderson and Seth Rogen. Screenshot from pamelaanderson and sethrogen via Instagram. Used under fair use for commentary.

What was meant to be a lighthearted awards season moment ended up striking a nerve for Pamela Anderson, who is now opening up about why a brief interaction with Seth Rogen at the Golden Globes left her feeling uncomfortable years later. In recent interviews, Anderson reflected on a moment that has resurfaced online, one that she now describes using a single blunt word. “Yucky.” It is not a dramatic accusation, not a headline-grabbing scandal, but rather a candid explanation of how a situation felt to her at the time and why it still lingers.

The moment in question happened during the Golden Globes ceremony, when Rogen publicly apologized to Anderson for the way she had been portrayed in the Hulu series Pam and Tommy. The show, which starred Lily James and Sebastian Stan, chronicled Anderson’s relationship with Motley Crue drummer Tommy Lee and the infamous stolen sex tape that followed them for decades.

At the time, Rogen was involved with the series as both an actor and executive producer. His apology, delivered from the stage, was meant to be conciliatory. But according to Anderson, the way it played out made her deeply uncomfortable.

Why the Apology Did Not Land the Way It Was Intended

Pamela Anderson Calls Golden Globes Moment With Seth Rogen ‘Yucky’
Pamela Anderson. Screenshot from pamelaanderson via Instagram. Used under fair use for commentary.

 

Anderson addressed the moment during a recent SiriusXM radio interview later reported by TMZ, that quickly gained traction online. She explained that she had not been warned in advance that Rogen planned to mention her during the Golden Globes ceremony. Sitting in the audience, she suddenly found herself the focus of a joke framed as an apology, delivered in front of a massive live audience.

That lack of consent is what bothered her most. She explained that the moment felt strange and awkward rather than healing. Instead of feeling respected or acknowledged, she felt put on the spot. In her words, the experience came across as “yucky,” a term she used deliberately to describe how the moment landed emotionally.

According to Anderson, the apology did not feel personal. It felt performative. She made it clear that she did not appreciate being turned into a punchline or an awards show moment without being asked first.

TMZ later reported that Rogen privately followed up after the ceremony to apologize. Anderson acknowledged the apology and confirmed that he did reach out. However, she maintained that the original public moment still did not sit right with her, even after the private conversation.

The discomfort was not about Rogen himself, she explained, but about the broader pattern of how her story has been handled over the years. Being spoken about instead of spoken with. Being referenced without being included.

To fully understand why the Golden Globes moment mattered so much to Anderson, it helps to look at her relationship with Pam and Tommy as a whole.

 

From the beginning, Anderson was vocal about not approving of the series and not participating in it. She said repeatedly that revisiting the sex tape scandal was painful and retraumatizing, especially since it was originally a crime that violated her privacy.

Despite those objections, the series moved forward and became a major pop culture hit. Critics praised the performances, and the show earned multiple award nominations. But for Anderson, none of that erased the emotional cost.

She has said that watching the industry celebrate a show built around one of the most traumatic experiences of her life felt deeply unsettling. So when Rogen referenced her on stage at the Golden Globes, it felt like another example of her story being used without her permission.

In the TMZ video posted to X, Anderson elaborated further, explaining that the apology moment reopened old wounds rather than closing them. She stressed that healing requires consent and agency, not surprise mentions in front of millions of viewers.

What Seth Rogen Has Said

Pamela Anderson Calls Golden Globes Moment With Seth Rogen ‘Yucky’
Seth Rogen. Screenshot from sethrogen via Instagram. Used under fair use for commentary.

 

According to TMZ, Rogen has acknowledged Anderson’s feelings and expressed regret over how the moment was handled. After the Golden Globes, he reportedly reached out privately to apologize, recognizing that the public nature of the apology may not have been appropriate.

Rogen has previously spoken about Pam and Tommy as an attempt to explore the media exploitation surrounding the tape rather than glorify it. However, Anderson has consistently countered that intent does not override impact, especially when the person most affected by the story was excluded from the process.

There is no indication from any source that the interaction escalated beyond that. No feud. No public back and forth. Just a moment that did not land as intended, and a person finally explaining why.

Why Fans Are Talking About It Now

The reason this story has resurfaced so strongly is not because of outrage, but because of resonance. Many fans responded to Anderson’s comments with understanding, particularly women who have experienced public discomfort disguised as humor or goodwill.

On social media, users pointed out how common it is for apologies to be framed in ways that prioritize the speaker rather than the recipient. Others noted how often women in entertainment are expected to smile through moments that make them uneasy.

Anderson’s willingness to call the moment “yucky” without turning it into a scandal struck a chord. It was honest. It was human. And it highlighted how something small can still carry emotional weight years later.

What makes the story compelling is its restraint. Anderson did not accuse. She did not dramatize. She simply explained how it felt, and why it mattered.

A Bigger Conversation About Consent and Storytelling

Pamela Anderson Calls Golden Globes Moment With Seth Rogen ‘Yucky’
Pamela Anderson. Screenshot from pamelaanderson via Instagram. Used under fair use for commentary.

 

At its core, this story is not just about one Golden Globes moment. It is about who gets to tell stories, who gets to speak, and who is expected to stay quiet.

Anderson has spent decades reclaiming her narrative after being reduced to headlines, jokes, and viral moments she never asked for. Her comments about Seth Rogen’s apology fit squarely into that larger journey.

She is no longer willing to accept gestures that look kind on the surface but leave her feeling exposed underneath. And that is why people are listening now.

Because sometimes the most powerful thing someone can say is not a dramatic declaration, but a simple, honest reaction. Even if that reaction is just one word. Yucky.