Kris Jenner Dismisses Oj Simpson Paternity Rumors in April 29 Podcast
Kris Jenner took aim at the long-running oj simpson rumor on Wednesday, April 29, saying speculation about Khloé Kardashian’s father “bothers me” and calling it “so ridiculous.” She raised the issue on Khloé Kardashian’s podcast, where the conversation turned directly to the persistent claim that Robert Kardashian was not Khloé’s real dad.
Kris Jenner on Khloé in Wonder Land
Jenner said people and the media get “fixated on” the rumor, then repeated that it “bothers me.” She also framed the gossip bluntly, saying, “Oh, maybe who your dad is.”
The exchange landed because it revisited a rumor that has circulated online for years and has followed the family even after repeated denials. Jenner shared Khloé, Kim, Kourtney and Rob with Robert Kardashian, who died in 2003.
Robert Kardashian and the rumor cycle
The speculation has not stayed in one place. On a recent season of The Kardashians, Khloé and Kim joked about it after Kim gave Khloé their dad’s bible, with Kim saying, “Well, it’s questionable between which one — between O.J. and dad.” Khloé answered, “either one,” before adding that “it’s proven he's our dad.”
That back-and-forth showed how the rumor still gets folded into family conversation, even as the people involved have already addressed it publicly. Simpson denied it in a 2019 video posted on Twitter, saying Khloé “is not mine,” that Robert Kardashian was “like a brother to me,” and that he never “had any interest in Kris, romantically or sexually.”
2019 denial and earlier response
Jenner had already pushed back on cheating allegations involving Simpson in 2019 on Keeping Up with the Kardashians, saying, “They printed a story that I was sleeping with O.J.” She followed that with a sharper line: “That f---ing piece of s---. It’s really kind of pathetic.”
Simpson died in 2024 at 76, but the rumor stayed alive online long after his denial. Jenner’s latest comments do not reopen the question so much as close another round of it, with Khloé already treating the joke as old enough to shrug off: “That’s long gone.”