Khloé Kardashian Says She Regrets Joining Lamar Odom Doc “As a Favor” After Feeling “Played”
Photo Credit: khloe in wonderland
Khloé Kardashian has sharply criticized Lamar Odom and his new Netflix documentary, “Untold: The Death & Life of Lamar Odom,” saying she now regrets agreeing to take part in the film. Speaking on the April 15 episode of her podcast “Khloé in Wonderland,” Kardashian said she joined the project purely “as a favor” to Odom and feels “pissed” and “so dumb” about her involvement now that the film and its promotional tour are out.
Regret over doing it ‘as a favor’
On her podcast, Kardashian emphasized that she did not receive any financial compensation for her role in the Netflix project, saying, “I’m not paid a cent” and that her only involvement was “sitting down and giving an interview.” She framed her participation as an act of support for Odom’s effort to tell his story, stating that she joined solely because he and his team asked, and because she wanted to ensure the portrayal would be constructive rather than purely sensational.
Kardashian said she now believes that trust was misplaced, telling listeners she feels “played” by Odom in light of comments he has made during the publicity push for the documentary. In a clip widely circulated by entertainment outlets, she said, “I feel so dumb” and expressed anger that, after she agreed to participate and revisited painful chapters of her life, Odom has allegedly “insinuat that I’m a liar” when discussing her role in his recovery.
The Netflix documentary and Odom’s perspective
“Untold: The Death & Life of Lamar Odom” explores the former NBA star’s high‑profile basketball career, his struggles with substance use, and the 2015 near‑fatal overdose in Nevada that led to multiple strokes, heart attacks, and a coma. The film includes interviews with Kardashian, who recounts what she describes as “absolute hell” during that period, including emergency hospitalizations and years of crisis management around Odom’s addiction.
In interviews tied to the documentary’s release, Odom has repeatedly credited his faith with saving his life, telling NBC’s Today that God—not any one individual—was ultimately responsible for his survival after his overdose and extensive medical complications. During that same appearance, when hosts referenced Kardashian’s widely reported role in rushing to his side and making medical decisions, Odom downplayed individual credit, a framing Kardashian later interpreted as discrediting her efforts.
Some coverage of the documentary has also highlighted Odom’s comment that he married Kardashian in part for “fame,” a remark Kardashian called out directly on her podcast and which entertainment news outlets have framed as a “brutal diss.” Kardashian said she was stunned to hear Odom and others in the film discuss their relationship in those terms after she had agreed to participate on the assumption that the project would treat both of them with respect.
Feeling ‘discredited’ over her role in his recovery
On “Khloé in Wonderland,” Kardashian said she was frustrated not only by Odom’s framing in the press but also by what she sees as omissions in the documentary’s final act, including limited focus on Odom’s sustained sobriety and her ongoing support during his recovery. She questioned why the film did not show more of Odom’s current life in recovery, reportedly asking, “You couldn’t show after the last 11 years your sobriety journey? If there was nothing positive to show at the end, that’s on you.”
Kardashian also accused Odom of “insinuating that I’m a liar,” saying she feels he is now “annoyed” with her for what she shared on camera, even though she says she only told the story that his team asked her to tell. She said she had deliberately held back certain painful details for years and again in the documentary out of respect for Odom and his family, adding that she had kept many aspects of his substance use and infidelity private for more than a decade.
In the wake of Odom’s media appearances, Kardashian said she felt that the narrative being promoted in interviews—particularly around who helped during his overdose and recovery—ran counter to what she experienced and to what viewers saw in the film. She described the situation as “crazy,” saying she does not enjoy discussing the most painful chapters of their relationship “all day long” and only did so because Odom and his team asked her to participate in the documentary.
The emotional toll and boundaries going forward
Kardashian has said repeatedly that the period surrounding Odom’s overdose and subsequent health crisis still affects her deeply, with nightmares and trauma related to hospital scenes and life‑support decisions. She said on her podcast that revisiting those events for the documentary was emotionally draining, describing the choice to participate as a difficult step she took in part for her own sense of closure as well as out of care for Odom.
Now, Kardashian says she is “beyond done” with revisiting her marriage to Odom in public projects, explaining on the podcast that she does not plan to participate in any future content centered on their relationship. She added that she had resolved not to do “another Lamar thing again” even before the latest round of press, and that her recent experience reaffirmed her decision to set firmer boundaries about which parts of her past she is willing to re‑open on camera.
During his own interviews, Odom has described the documentary as an honest look at addiction, fame, and personal accountability, telling Today that he hopes sharing his story can help others facing similar struggles. He also said he dreams of coaching and of maintaining his recovery, indicating that his focus now is on faith, family, and long‑term well‑being following years of instability.
While neither Kardashian nor Odom has explicitly framed the dispute in terms broader than their own relationship, the tensions around the documentary touch on recurring questions about how reality‑TV figures and public personalities navigate consent, narrative control, and emotional safety when participating in deeply personal nonfiction projects. Kardashian’s comments underscore that even people who have long lived in the public eye, including members of prominent entertainment families and their partners, may still struggle to balance transparency with protection of their own mental health when telling stories that involve addiction, betrayal, and survival.
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