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Home»Entertainment

Kevin Hart’s ex-assistant says secrets are still buried

Shekari PhilemonBy Shekari PhilemonJune 1, 2026 Entertainment No Comments4 Mins Read
Kevin Hart
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Kevin Hart has built one of the most recognizable entertainment brands of his generation, but the infrastructure behind that brand is showing cracks. His production company, Hartbeat, is currently navigating a legal battle with former employees, a round of significant layoffs and growing questions about its long-term direction. Now, a woman who once worked at the center of his operation is adding her voice to the conversation.

Miesha Shakes, who served as Hart’s executive assistant from 2017 to 2020, says the current turmoil is entirely consistent with what she witnessed during her time working for him. Her assessment is pointed, personal and timed to a moment when public trust in Hart is already under strain.

The lawsuit at the heart of Hartbeat

The legal trouble stems from a dispute between Hartbeat and two former employees connected to the company’s podcast division. Hartbeat filed suit earlier this year alleging breach of contract, unfair business practices and the misappropriation of trade secrets. The former employees have denied any wrongdoing and pushed back against the company’s attempt to obtain an injunction, arguing there is no credible evidence that confidential information was improperly used.

The case is ongoing, but its public visibility has created an opening for others with knowledge of the company’s internal culture to share their perspectives.

A former insider breaks her silence

Shakes did not hold back in her assessment of the situation. Speaking publicly for the first time about her years working for Hart, she described a pattern of concealment that she believes has never been fully brought to light. She framed the current legal and financial difficulties not as a surprise but as an inevitable consequence of how things had long been operating behind the scenes.

She also questioned the role of money in how Hart manages his professional relationships, suggesting that financial priorities had damaged working bonds that should have been protected. Her critique extended to the broader culture she observed during her three years inside the operation, painting a picture of an environment where loyalty had limits and ambition had a cost.

Shakes recently released a book titled Truth, Lies, Entertainment, and her comments about Hart arrived in that context, giving her account a platform beyond a single interview.

Other voices from inside Hartbeat

Shakes is not the only former employee raising concerns. At least one other ex-staffer, not connected to the active lawsuit, has described the legal action against the former podcast employees as excessive and misdirected. That person characterized the two employees being sued as credible professionals who recognized internal warning signs and acted accordingly.

The broader picture that emerges from multiple accounts is of a company that expanded aggressively, took on significant overhead commitments and then found itself poorly positioned when the entertainment industry pulled back. A partnership with a major brand management group, which some insiders reportedly viewed with skepticism, has also drawn scrutiny as a potential turning point in the company’s trajectory.

Hart addressed the layoffs publicly during a recent media appearance, framing the decision to downsize as a necessary financial move rather than a sign of deeper instability. He was firm that Hartbeat remains a going concern and has no intention of shutting down.

A separate controversy adding to the pressure

The Hartbeat situation is not Hart’s only reputational challenge at the moment. A Netflix roast special produced by his company drew significant backlash after a comedian made a joke referencing George Floyd during the live event. Hart acknowledged the joke was in poor taste but defended his decision not to intervene during the taping, citing the nature of live production.

The response from some in the public and within his own community has been critical. Shakes directly addressed this as well, arguing that what many people want from Hart is not an explanation of logistics but an acknowledgment of responsibility and a genuine apology that has not yet come.

A brand at a crossroads

Hart has spent years carefully cultivating an image of relentless positivity, hard work and redemption after earlier personal controversies. The accumulation of current pressures, legal, financial and cultural, is testing that image in ways that careful messaging alone may not be able to manage.

Whether the secrets Shakes alludes to ever fully surface remains to be seen. What is already visible is a very public reckoning with the distance between a carefully constructed brand and the more complicated reality behind it.

celebrity controversy entertainment industry Featured George Floyd Hartbeat Kevin Hart legal battle Miesha Shakes Netflix roast production company
Shekari Philemon

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