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Wendy Williams set to appear on ‘The View’ after begging for help

Wendy Williams returns to Primetime.

The former TV host 60 is expected to appear in “The View” on Friday. Talk show guest list this week.

Williams will call the show and speak to co-hosts with co-hosts Hoopy Goldberg, Joy Behar, Sunny Hostin, Sarah Haynes, Anna Navarro and Alyssa Farrar Griffin.

“View” schedule.

Also included in the call are Ginalisa Monterroso, founder and president of Connect Care Advisory Group.

The post contacted Williams' attorney for declined to comment.

The interview will come to the heels of radio personalities on Monday, throwing handwritten notes for help through the windows of a New York support facility.

Wendy Williams leads from the NYC apartment buildings by NYPD officers. Matthew McDermott
Wendy Williams on Monday. Matthew McDermott

Read the message “Help! Wendy!!”

At the time, police and law enforcement sources told the Post that they received a call around 11:15am after Williams threw a note from her five-storey room.

She later found her waving her arm on the phone in front of the window.

Williams was then taken to Lennox Hill Hospital, where her mental abilities were reportedly determined to be unharmed despite her previous aphasia and frontotemporal dementia diagnosis.

The “Wendy Williams Show” alum stays in the facility's expensive memory care conditions while fighting to end the court-ordered guardianship.

Wendy Williams is looking for help. Elder Ordonez/Instarimages
Wendy Williams was taken away by ambulance. Matthew McDermott

Williams is used to undergo a psychological test called a “capacity test” at the hospital, earning “10 out of 10”, answering all 10 questions, and determining whether she is properly directed in the alert. TMZ.

Meanwhile, the doctors are said to have not conducted any tests that could indicate whether she was misdiagnosed.

In January, Williams' loved ones launched GoFundMe to raise $50,000 for the star's new legal team.

After the gofundme was created, her nie, Alex Finney “Breakfast Club” To address the claim that her aunt was cognitively impaired and wanted freedom from controversial guardianship.

Wendy Williams was taken away by ambulance. Matthew McDermott

During the call, Williams compared guardianship to “prison.”

She said she can call her, but they can't call her. She also has zero internet access via a laptop or iPad.

In addition to isolation, Williams argued that he was “cognitively intact,” saying, “Does I feel that way, what?”

“My life is getting excited,” she continued. “I feel like I'm in prison. I'm definitely isolated. I leave the door closed, watch TV, listen to the radio, look out the window. Sit here as my life goes on.”

Wendy Williams phoned Monday. Elder Ordonez/Instarimages

“I'm in this place where people are in the 90s, 80s and 70s,” explained Williams. “There's something wrong with these people on this floor.”

Gofundme is an explicit detail about what is said to be happening in the life of a New Yorker.

“For too long, despite her strong will and determination to live her life independently, Wendy has faced the challenge of being unfairly placed under her protection and being labeled as incompetent,” the description reads in part.

Wendy Williams throws a note for the photographer to help. Elder Ordonez/Instarimages

“Her current situation is not only unfair, but deeply isolated. The Guardian assigned to her cut off her connections with friends and family, leaving her without the support network she desperately needs. This isolation in New York made it increasingly difficult for her to maintain her strength and resilience.”

The GoFundMe page asks the public for help. “Your generous contribution can make a huge difference! By uniting solidarity, you can speed up Wendy's homecoming and make sure he no longer has to endure the pain of loneliness and amputation.”

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