Kristin Cavallari describes two dates before hotel exposure claim
kristin cavallari says a very famous man exposed himself to her on a second date about four years ago, after what she described as two of the best dates of her life. She said the meetings at the Sunset Tower Hotel and the Beverly Hills Hotel started well before the mood changed in a suite.
Sunset Tower and Beverly Hills
“two really great dates, honestly two of the best dates of my life” was how Cavallari described the first two outings on her Let’s Be Honest podcast. The dates began at the Sunset Tower Hotel and the Beverly Hills Hotel, then moved into a suite where the pair swam all day, took showers separately, and ate dinner on the patio.
That sequence matters because it gives the allegation a clear setting and timeline: the incident did not come out of a bad first meeting, but out of a second date that had already gone unusually far for two people still getting to know each other. Cavallari said the man was known for having a big d–k, and that expectation shaped how she read the moment before it turned.
The moment in the suite
“I have a mole on my d–k. It’s not like that bad, but it’s noticeable. Can I just show it to you?” Cavallari said he asked before pulling out his d–k in front of her for the first time. Her reaction was immediate: “Put it away, f–king weirdo.”
She also said, “This is mean, but I think he’s kind of known for having a big d–k and it wasn’t that big and I think that’s what the insecurity was really about,” which turns the story from a simple shock anecdote into a public rebuke of the behavior itself. Cavallari did not frame the night as an ambiguous misunderstanding; she framed it as a turnoff that ended the date on the spot.
Why Cavallari said it now
The remarks landed on the latest episode of her Let’s Be Honest podcast, turning a private memory from about four years ago into a public allegation tied to two high-profile Los Angeles hotels. For anyone tracking how celebrity stories circulate now, the detail that she told it in her own long-form format is the point: it gives her control over the account, the language, and the timeline.
She closed the story with a blunt physical reaction to what came before: “Can I be honest with you? Changing out of his swimsuit, he had the flattest ass and horrible bacne scars. We’ve got bigger fish to fry, buddy. [That’s] one of the biggest f–king turnoffs.” That is the sharpest line in the account, and it leaves the man unnamed while still making the complaint public in enough detail to travel on its own.