Current:Home > ContactJudge Judy's Nighttime Activity With Husband Jerry Sheindlin Is Very on Brand -GrowthInsight
Judge Judy's Nighttime Activity With Husband Jerry Sheindlin Is Very on Brand
View
Date:2025-04-14 00:29:41
The verdict is in: Judge Judy is a certified binger.
The 81-year-old—whose real name is Judy Sheindlin—recently revealed her and husband Jerry Sheindlin’s go-to nighttime activity involves catching their favorite reruns of, naturally, crime-centered TV.
“Watch Jerry Orbach,” Judy exclusively told E! News correspondent Will Marfuggi, referring to the original leading man of Law & Order. “Occasionally, I got to Criminal Minds. And Vincent [D’Onofrio] in Criminal Content. I watch after dinner, when I’m getting ready for bed.”
Just don’t ask her to take her binging into the true crime podcast sphere. “I’ve never listened to a podcast,” she noted. “Not interested.” (For more with Judy, tune into E! News tonight Sept. 24 at 11 p.m.)
And just as the longtime TV judge’s genre of choice doesn’t come as a surprise, the amusing reason behind her strict adherence to only watching re-runs is likewise characteristically very Judy.
“I hate falling asleep to something new,” she admitted. “I know the end with the re-runs! I know that’s ridiculous. If I watch something new, it has to be great.”
As she added of any new series, “You have to be invested now, knowing there’s 12 episodes to the end of the series. And—maybe it’s an age thing—but what happens if I die in episode six?”
And much like Judy has personally fostered a loyalty to crime re-runs, her eponymous series as well as her new Judy Justice series on Prime Video have also garnered a steadfast fanbase.
But, according to the woman herself, the case as to how Judy’s series have found so much success doesn’t take a detective to crack.
“I don’t sway depending on who’s producing this program, who the audience is and how they might react to my verdict,” she explained. “I speak the truth and it’s consistent. The basics are the same. People still want to see consistent yes/no, black/white.”
As she put it, “I don’t make excuses for bad behavior. My priority is to keep citizens safe.”
In fact, that predictability and simplicity is why she so favors Law & Order.
“You watch the show because there’s a certain cadence,” she reflected. “And they almost always catch the bad guy.”
New episodes of Judy Justice stream weekdays on Amazon Freevee and Prime Video.
For the latest breaking news updates, click here to download the E! News AppveryGood! (819)
Related
- Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear ready to campaign for Harris-Walz after losing out for spot on the ticket
- Love Is Blind’s Izzy Zapata Debuts New Girlfriend After Stacy Snyder Breakup
- Put another nickel in: How Cincinnati helped make jukeboxes cool
- Pennsylvania prison officials warned of 'escape risk' before Danelo Cavalcante breakout
- NCAA hands former Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh a 4-year show cause order for recruiting violations
- Supreme Court orders makers of gun parts to comply with federal ghost gun rules
- Bike riding in middle school may boost mental health, study finds
- Man imprisoned 16 years for wrongful conviction fatally shot by Georgia deputy
- New Zealand official reverses visa refusal for US conservative influencer Candace Owens
- Ivor Robson, longtime British Open starter, dies at 83
Ranking
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Stretch of I-25 to remain closed for days as debris from train derailment is cleared
- Snack food maker to open production in long-overlooked Louisville area, Beshear says
- Inflation in UK unchanged at 6.7% in September, still way more than Bank of England’s target of 2%
- $73.5M beach replenishment project starts in January at Jersey Shore
- Ford chair bashes UAW for escalating strike, says Ford is not the enemy — Toyota, Honda and Tesla are
- Ukraine uses US-supplied long-range missiles for 1st time in Russia airbase attack
- China’s Xi promises more market openness and new investments for Belt and Road projects
Recommendation
Kehlani Responds to Hurtful Accusation She’s in a Cult
Martin Scorsese's Killers of the Flower Moon: A true story of love and evil
South Africa hopes to ease crippling blackouts as major power station recovers
Maren Morris Files For Divorce From Husband Ryan Hurd After 5 Years of Marriage
Working Well: When holidays present rude customers, taking breaks and the high road preserve peace
US Rep. Debbie Lesko won’t seek re-election in Arizona next year
Major U.S. science group lays out a path to smooth the energy transtion
Brawl in Houston courtroom as murdered girl’s family tries to attack her killer after guilty plea