Jack Osbourne fired again this week on the insults that Roger Waters hurled final month at his late father Ozzy Osbourne, who died in July on the age of 76.
Throughout an interview with the Unbiased Ink, Waters had expressed his emotions in regards to the “Prince of Darkness” and his music.
“Ozzy Osbourne, who simply died, bless him in his no matter that state that he was in his entire life,” the 81-year-old rocker advised host Dwayne Sales space. “We’ll by no means know. The music, I don’t know, I couldn’t give a f—.”
He added: “I don’t care about Black Sabbath, I by no means did. Have little interest in biting the heads of chickens or no matter they do. I couldn’t care much less, you understand.”
Osbourne’s son, Jack, caught wind of Waters’ phrases and turned on the conflict machine. He took to his Instagram on Tuesday to defend his dad.
“Hey Roger Waters F— You,” Jack posted on his web page, utilizing white lettering on a crimson background. “How pathetic and out of contact you’ve turn out to be.”
Waters, who co-founded the band Pink Floyd in 1965 and has toured as a solo act since 1999, usually posts politically pushed messages in an analogous model on his account.
“The one means you appear to get consideration as of late is by vomiting out b— within the press. My father at all times thought you had been a c— thanks for proving him proper,” he added. He ended the publish with a clown emoji.
The youngest of the Osbourne clan appeared alongside his father within the MTV actuality collection “The Osbournes” from 2002 by way of 2005 and the Historical past Channel’s “Ozzy & Jack’s World Detour” from 2016 by way of 2018.
The Black Sabbath frontman revealed to David Letterman in an episode of “Late Evening” in 1982 that he had beheaded a bat onstage accidentally, a feat that had added to the appreciable lore constructed across the heavy metallic legend.
Ozzy Osbourne made his final public look through the band’s farewell live performance, “Again to the Starting,” on July 5 at their hometown of Birmingham, England. He died on July 22 of a coronary heart assault.