Shamea Morton was questioned about Angela Oakley‘s handling of Porsha Williams‘ suggestion that she should sleep with her husband, Charles Oakley, and her laughing about the matter on Sunday’s episode of Watch What Happens Live.
As the statement continues to be a hot topic amongst the women, the 42-year-old Real Housewives of Atlanta star reacted to Angela, 43, being quicker to forgive Porsha, 43, as she targeted Angela’s instigating, shaded Porsha’s “victim” behavior, broke down about the end of their decades-long friendship, and more.
“[Porsha’s] not my child. That’s my friend. If you feel some kind of way about what she’s saying, you say something to her. You check her,” Shamea stated on the May 11 episode of WWHL after being asked why she acted as if Angela had overreacted to what Porsha had said. “You hugged her, embraced her, and you moved on rather quickly, but you’re still mad at me for laughing.”
“At the end of the day, you can’t keep a man that doesn’t want to be kept. If she can actually pull Charles to sleep with him, then did you really have him? I say the same thing about my husband before you say, ‘If the shoe was turned around, or if it was on the other foot, how would you react?’ I would laugh. Because if you can take Charles from me, good riddance,” she added.
Amid her drama with Porsha, Shamea found herself questioning Angela’s intentions after watching how she relayed the feeling she expressed about their friendship.
“These were Angela’s feelings, not saying that she was wrong about a lot of it. But when she brought it back to Porsha, it was like she was stirring the pot, almost like instigating things, and I’m noticing that’s what she does a lot,” Shamea stated. “She’ll bring things back like, ‘Oh it’s lopsided,’ but these are your words, sis, I never said that to you.”
According to Shamea, she would “never confide” in Angela because they “just met.”
Overall, Shamea felt that the cast was too involved in her relationship issues with Porsha — and that Porsha allowed them to be.
“The ladies will come and be like, ‘Hey, I heard she didn’t come to your wedding.’ And I’m like, that’s true. ‘That must’ve hurt you.’ And I’m like, ‘Absolutely. It was a very hurtful thing, but we moved past it.’ ‘Yeah, but it seems like you’re always there for her and speaking up for her, and she doesn’t do the same for you,’” Shamea explained. “But they would’ve never been able to do that if it was just me. The fact that she opened up and allowed for our friendship to be open for discussion, it fools me. I don’t understand it.”