Why Sharon Osbourne considered sending Roger Waters a box of poop after Ozzy Osbourne’s passing

Sharon Osbourne revealed she almost sent Roger Waters a package containing faeces following his remarks about Ozzy Osbourne after the musician’s passing.

This wouldn’t have been an unprecedented move for Sharon, who has a history of sending such packages to individuals who have wronged her, including journalists. In a past interview with The Guardian, she mentioned: “I suppose I find it funny.”

During her appearance on Piers Morgan Uncensored, Sharon discussed how close she came to sending Waters a box after his comments about her deceased husband.

She admitted she considered using an upscale box from Tiffany for the gesture but ultimately chose not to go through with it.

Sharon shared with Piers Morgan: “I was going to send him one of my Tiffany boxes, but I will save it… You know, it’s a waste because he’s really insignificant. But I just thought, with anybody that passes that has a family, you don’t do that.”

She then criticized Waters, stating: “He’s a has-been… Oh, my God, he’s definitely not wired right.

“Five wives later, and, you know, hates everybody that’s successful, and he’s stomping around in his pathetic, homemade Nazi outfit. He’s just, he’s nuts.”

Roger Waters, a controversial figure, had made comments after Ozzy’s death, disparaging the Black Sabbath singer.

Responding to the news of his death, Waters, 82, remarked: “I don’t care about Black Sabbath, I never did, I have no interest. I couldn’t care less.”

He further launched personal jabs at Ozzy, even mentioning the singer’s battle with addiction.

“Ozzy Osbourne, who just died, bless him, in his whatever that state that he was in his whole life,” he said. “We’ll never know, we didn’t, you know? Although he was all over the TV for hundreds of years with his idiocy and nonsense.”

In her 2006 interview with The Guardian, Sharon recounted her past of sending faeces to those who offended her.

“The last turd? Three, no, four years ago,” she mentioned. “When the first review came out of The Osbournes and it was from a newspaper in America … the journalist said something about my kids being fat and how unappealing that was.

“And I thought any journalist worth their salt would never write that about children in the society that we live in today.”