For decades, the question followed Gayle King everywhere she went. And for years, she wanted her best friend to help make it stop. Now, at 70, she is talking about it openly and with a sense of peace that took a long time to find.
In a recent podcast appearance, the veteran television anchor addressed the longstanding public speculation about the nature of her friendship with Oprah Winfrey. She was direct, warm and unapologetic. She made clear that the two women are not and have never been romantically involved, and she added that there would be absolutely nothing wrong with it if they were. Her preference, she explained, has simply always been for men.
When the rumor actually hurt
What made the conversation particularly candid was her willingness to admit that the speculation did not always roll off her back the way it does today. There was a period when the rumors genuinely stung, coinciding with one of the most painful stretches of her personal life.
She had been married to a Connecticut attorney, a marriage that ended in 1993 after he was unfaithful with someone close to her. Recently divorced, newly single and navigating an already difficult emotional landscape, a tabloid ran a story suggesting the real reason her marriage had collapsed was a secret romantic relationship with Winfrey. The story landed hard.
She repeatedly urged Winfrey to address the rumors publicly on her talk show, making the case that the speculation was actively making her personal life more difficult. She was single, she was trying to date and she felt the narrative was working against her. Winfrey declined, expressing the view that the better approach was simply to leave it alone.
Two very different positions
The tension between the two friends in that moment reflected a real difference in their circumstances. Winfrey has been in a long-term relationship with Stedman Graham since 1986, meaning the rumors carried a different kind of weight for her than they did for the anchor, who was unpartnered and felt the social consequences more directly.
She pushed back on her friend’s measured approach, pointing out that it was easy to counsel patience from a place of stability. The exchange, now recounted with humor and affection, captures something genuine about how even the closest friendships can involve real disagreement and unequal stakes.
A friendship built over nearly five decades
The two women first met in 1976 when both were working at a Baltimore television station. Winfrey was anchoring the evening news while the future CBS morning anchor was working as a production assistant. What began as a professional connection grew into one of the most examined and celebrated friendships in American public life.
She has spoken warmly about the relationship in various interviews over the years, consistently framing her connection to Winfrey as a source of genuine pride rather than just proximity to fame. The friendship has outlasted marriages, career shifts, public controversies and now half a century of persistent rumors.
Getting to a place of peace
What comes through most clearly in her recent remarks is that she has genuinely arrived somewhere different emotionally. The rumors that once felt urgent and damaging now register as background noise. She has reached a point where very little has the power to truly get to her anymore.
It is a notable admission from someone who spent years feeling the real-world weight of a story that was never true. The speculation has not gone away entirely. People still raise it. But her relationship to it has shifted completely, and that shift, more than any denial, may be the most compelling part of the story.

