Andy Cohen is still weighing in on Jill Zarin’s sudden firing from E!’s upcoming RHONY spinoff, and now he’s comparing the situation to one of the most infamous self-inflicted Housewives moments in recent memory.

After Jill was cut from The Golden Life following backlash over her Super Bowl halftime rant about Bad Bunny, Andy has addressed the fallout multiple times on Andy Cohen Live. His latest comments framed the situation as what he called an “unforced error” — and he didn’t stop there.
“And by the way,” Andy said on air, “as one of the Jersey housewives pointed out… not since Jennifer Aydin at Jersey Mike’s when she picked up the phone to start, you know?”
His cohost Scott chimed in bluntly: “Right. You didn’t have to weigh in.”
The comparison instantly clicked for Bravo fans. Jennifer Aydin’s Jersey Mike’s airport incident became shorthand for a Housewife creating unnecessary controversy in a public setting — and Andy is now placing Jill’s rant in that same category: a moment no one asked for that spiraled into real consequences.

Jill was originally announced as part of E!’s new series reuniting OG RHONY stars in Palm Beach. But just days after her casting news, a since-deleted Instagram video surfaced where she criticized Bad Bunny’s halftime performance, calling it inappropriate and political. The backlash was swift. Producers ultimately cut ties, issuing a statement that her comments did not align with the network’s standards.
Andy has been careful not to pile on, but he hasn’t sugarcoated the situation either. On previous episodes, he made it clear viewers should direct official complaints to E!, not him — while also expressing disbelief at how fast the opportunity slipped away.
What makes his latest remark notable is how it frames Jill’s firing less as a scandal and more as a preventable mistake. In Housewives language, an “unforced error” is the worst kind — drama you create for yourself.

And in Bravo history, those moments tend to stick.
Whether Jill makes a comeback somewhere down the line remains to be seen. But Andy’s comparison signals how the network world is viewing this: not as a feud, not as a conspiracy, but as a veteran reality star tripping over her own microphone at the worst possible time.
