Ozzy Osbourne Says 'The Osbournes' TV Show Reboot Will 'Never' Happen in a 'Million Years'

In the latest episode of 'The Osbournes Podcast,' Jack, Sharon, Kelly and Ozzy Osbourne discussed the impact their reality show had on them as a family

Kevin Winter/Getty Ozzy Osbourne
Kevin Winter/Getty Ozzy Osbourne

Ozzy Osbourne has shut down any talk about his family's reality TV show making a return.

In the latest episode of The Osbournes Podcast released on Tuesday, Ozzy, 74, his wife Sharon, daughter Kelly and son Jack discussed the impact of their reality series on their health, which ran for four seasons on MTV until 2005.

When Jack, 38, asked his family members if the reality show had a "positive or negative effect on everyone’s mental health”, Kelly, 39, replied that it had “a massive negative effect."

“Imagine having to relive every conversation you’ve ever had throughout a 24-hour period or six month period, and then all of a sudden people are judging everything you’ve said,” Kelly said. “You’re just like, ‘Wait I just thought I was having a normal conversation, now this person hates me.’ It’s crazy. It just made me so insecure.”

Related: Ozzy Osbourne Says 'Every' Antidepressant He's Taken Has 'Killed' His Sex Drive

While the Black Sabbath bandleader acknowledged the series was the "best diary" for the future, he noted that the show made him "a bit crazy at times."

“It’s so intrusive in your house,” Ozzy said. “At the time, I said I wanted a safe room where I could go and pick my nose and squeeze a zit if I want to without being on camera, and they had a f---ing camera in there. When you’ve got hidden cameras, you start to freak out.”

Ozzy explained that as the seasons went on the show became more "unreal," and Jack added that's “why I don’t think we’ll ever do another season."

“It won’t happen again. Never in a million years," Ozzy concluded, to which Jack agreed: “To be honest with you, I don’t think it should."

Last year, the family announced they had a 10-part series called Home to Roost, to air on BBC One and iPlayer, which was supposed to document the Osbournes' journey from Los Angeles back to the U.K., alongside daughter Kelly and son Jack's efforts to support them.

Kevin Mazur/WireImage Kelly Osbourne, Ozzy Osbourne, Sharon Osbourne and Jack Osbourne attend the 56th GRAMMY Awards at Staples Center on January 26, 2014 in Los Angeles, California
Kevin Mazur/WireImage Kelly Osbourne, Ozzy Osbourne, Sharon Osbourne and Jack Osbourne attend the 56th GRAMMY Awards at Staples Center on January 26, 2014 in Los Angeles, California

Related: Sharon Osbourne Says She and Ozzy Still Have an Assisted Suicide Pact in Place: 'See Ya'

Producers were planning to capture everything from the family's actual move home to Sharon's then-milestone 70th birthday and the debut of Kelly's first child.

"It will be a genuine portrait, showing Sharon and Ozzy as they face up to illness and the challenges of getting older, but with the usual Osbourne eccentricities, humor, warmth and love," the BBC said in a release at the time.

However, Ozzy has been battling health issues and underwent a series of operations after having a fall in 2019.

In September, he had his final spinal surgery. 

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