Graham Norton Revealed the 7 Golden Age Guests Who Were ACTUALLY EVIL – HT

 

 

 

And it was similar to my own show. It’s a bunch of guests at the same time. So I did the first show. I thought it went well and uh but then I got a call from a guy the head haunt show at the radio station wanted to take me out for lunch uh to discuss that show and maybe give me some advice.

 For over 20 years, Graham Norton has ruled late night television with his signature humor and the unforgettable chaos of the Graham Norton Show. But hidden beneath that laughter is a truth he’s avoided for years. seven guests whose behavior was so toxic, so calculated that Norton now calls them the darkest I’ve ever met. And once you hear what they did, you’ll never watch their films the same way again.

Number one, Mark Wahlberg. Mark Wahberg’s appearance on the Graham Norton Show didn’t just disrupt the episode, it detonated it. It remains the only moment in the show’s long history where Graham Norton visibly struggled to stay in control. What made this moment truly unforgettable, however, wasn’t just the awkwardness.

 It was the sheer unpredictability that Wahberg brought with him the moment he stepped on stage. From the beginning, something felt off. Wahlberg wasn’t just relaxed. He was gone. His speech was slurred, his confidence inflated, and his filter completely missing. Guests who arrive a bit tipsy are not rare on Norton’s show, but Wahlberg wasn’t tipsy.

 He was fully intoxicated, and the consequences of that quickly became impossible to ignore. He constantly interrupted the conversation, barging into stories with rambling jokes and half-finish thoughts that made the audience shift in discomfort. Even Sarah Silverman, a comedian known for thriving in chaos, kept glancing at Norton as if silently asking, “Is this really happening?” Then came the moment that pushed everything over the edge.

 Without warning, Wahberg stumbled across the couch, climbed into Graham Norton’s lap, wrapped his arm around the host’s shoulders, and started whispering drunken jokes directly into his ear. Norton tried to keep smiling, but the tension was obvious. His eyes darted between the cameras, the audience, and his producer, silently begging for the moment to end.

 The crowd laughed nervously, not because it was funny, but because no one knew what else to do. When the show ended, Norton walked straight to his dressing room and said only one sentence. He will never be back, ever. Norton later admitted that Wahlberg was completely out of it and the interview became one of the few episodes he never wanted to rewatch.

The chaos didn’t end when Wahlberg left the seat. It lingered in the studio on social media. They have not spoken since that night. Wahberg has privately joked about getting too drunk on that British show. Graham’s team, however, has a strict internal note. Do not bookmark Wahlberg under any circumstances. For Norton, it wasn’t either.

 It was simply the most unmanageable, unpredictable, and uncomfortable guest experience of his entire career. Number two, Harvey Weinstein. The tension between Graeham Norton and Harvey Weinstein didn’t build slowly. It detonated the moment Weinstein stepped onto Norton’s stage. Weinstein wasn’t a guest. He was an intrusion.

 and Norton felt it immediately. What started the feud was simple. Weinstein tried to control the show. Within seconds, he hijacked conversations, steamrolled over jokes, and cut off other guests mid-sentence. Norton suddenly found himself competing with a man who refused to share oxygen. Norton didn’t hide his annoyance.

 He later admitted, “I knew right away he was going to bulldoze everything. He took over the room like he owned it.” That wasn’t exaggeration. It was exactly how the interview played out. Every time Norton tried to shift the segment, Weinstein yanked it back to himself, his movies, his achievements, his power. At one point, Norton attempted a light joke to break the tension.

 Weinstein stared unimpressed and replied, “Let’s talk about something serious.” It was the kind of line that freezes a studio. It was a warning. Norton hit back years later after Weinstein’s empire collapsed. In an interview, he finally said what he couldn’t say on air. I had no idea what he’d done, but I knew something was wrong.

 That energy, that entitlement, it all makes sense now. Weinstein didn’t take kindly to being criticized by a talk show host. He was furious that a comedian dared to call him out publicly when so many Hollywood elites stayed silent. Their feud never needed a second chapter. It ended the moment Weinstein’s crimes reached the courts.

 Norton washed his hands of him completely. No sympathy, no contact. Their relationship today is exactly what Norton prefers. Non-existent, irreversible, and finally honest. Number three, Robert Dairo. What irritates Graham Norton more than anything isn’t rudeness. It’s refusal. Refusal to play, to respond, to participate. And that’s exactly what Robert Dairo brought to the Graham Norton show.

 It was so hard that Norton later described the experience as trying to interview fog. The tension between them began the moment Dairo sat down. Norton could feel it. The clipped nods, the way Dairo<unk>’s eyes drifted away whenever Norton spoke. No hostility, no ego, just a cold absence that made every question land with a dull thud. Norton tried warmth.

 He tried humor. He tried teasing. Dairo met each effort with the same stony minimalism. At one point, Norton asked about a classic Dairo character, expecting at least a chuckle or anecdote. Dairo shrugged and muttered, “I don’t really talk about that stuff.” The studio went still. It was dismissive and that was worse.

 After the episode aired, Norton didn’t hide his exasperation. He admitted publicly, “Some interviews are hard work. Roberts was very hard work. He gives you so little you start sweating.” This was practically a confession of battle fatigue. Dairo, for his part, didn’t apologize or defend himself. He simply reinforced the wall Norton had spent the entire night trying to scale.

When asked later about his notoriously icy talk show appearances, Dairo responded, “I don’t perform on couches. I do the job, then I go home.” It wasn’t aimed directly at Norton, but it was enough. A coded message. Don’t expect anything from me I don’t want to give. Since then, there was never a fight to resolve.

 only a gap neither man cared to bridge. Today they have no connection, no warm words, no plans to reunite. Norton hasn’t invited him back. Dairo hasn’t shown interest in returning. Number four, Daryl Hannah. Among all the guests Graham Norton has struggled with, Daryl Hannah remains the one that still makes him wse because she gave him absolutely nothing.

 Norton can handle chaos. He can even handle arrogance. What he cannot survive is silence so heavy it suffocates the entire show. And that’s exactly what happened the day Daryl Hannah walked onto the red sofa. The fracture between them started within the first 20 seconds. Norton delivered his usual warm welcome, but Hannah met it with a faint smile and a single word.

Hi. It was distance. A distance so sharp it cut through the room. Norton tried pivoting. He asked about her film, her activism, her past roles. Every question boomeranged back in the same limp clipped pattern. Yes. Not really. I don’t know. Even the audience sensed the vacuum forming around her. Laughter faded.

 The other guests began filling the space out of desperation. Norton kept pushing gently at first, then with the comedic proddding he uses when a guest needs loosening up, but with Hannah, there was no cracking the shell. She seemed completely unwilling to let the show breathe. After the episode aired, Norton didn’t sugarcoat it.

 He admitted, “It felt like she’d been dragged there. I could not get her to engage. Longest interview of my life.” Those close to the show echoed the sentiment. She wasn’t hostile. She was simply absent. For a program built on interplay, that absence was fatal. Hannah never patched things over. When asked years later about the awkward appearance, she responded with characteristic minimalism.

Talk shows aren’t really my thing. No explanation, no apology, no attempt to bridge the gap. Today, their relationship is exactly as the interview was, cold, distant, and untouched. Norton has never invited her back. Hannah has never asked to return, and both seem perfectly content keeping it that way. Number five, Mickey Ror.

The moment Mickey Ror walked onto Graham Norton’s stage, the air tightened. Norton opened with his usual charm, and Ror responded with a vacant nod that shut the entire room down. It was the kind of energy that makes a host instantly realize, “This is going to be work.” Norton tried again, asking about Ror’s film. Ror responded with flat apathy.

“Yeah, I don’t know, whatever.” No explanation, just a verbal dead end. The audience chuckled, mistaking it for dry humor. Norton knew better. This wasn’t shy awkwardness. It was disengagement so absolute it became hostile by default. Every question Norton lobbed bounced off Ror like it had hit concrete. No anecdotes, just a man exuding the energy of someone trapped in a place he despised.

Years later, Norton didn’t hide how painful it was. he admitted. I kept thinking, “Give me something. Anything. It was like trying to interview a ghost.” Coming from a host who once survived Mark Wahlberg drunkenly straddling him on live TV. That confession says everything. And Ror, he didn’t soften. When asked about the appearance, he shrugged through the same fog he brought to the show. Talk shows aren’t my thing.

I just do them because I have to. Not an apology, not even an acknowledgement, just casual dismissal. The exact attitude that had sunk the interview in the first place. Their feud existed in silence. Norton never invited him back. Ror never asked to return. Today, their relationship remains exactly as hollow as that interview.

 No warmth, no connection, and no intention from either side to ever try again. And when you look at the wreckage left behind after encounters like these, it’s no wonder Graham Norton finally decided to reveal the seven golden age guests who weren’t just difficult, but genuinely destructive. Who do you think was the most shocking on his list, and why? Tell us in the comments below.

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