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The look in the eyes of the men who were assisting Faye Resnick in her tell-all book about her deceased friend Nicole Brown Simpson on The People v.
Simpson: American Crime Story when she started dishing out gossip could be best described as the look of two men who just won the jackpot. With Resnick discussing things like the scandalous "Brentwood Hello ," it was no wonder the publishers rushed the book out.
Considering that even at the time of its release, Resnick's book Nicole Brown Simpson: The Private Diary of a Life Interrupted was considered gossip, should the public really put too much stock in Resnick's words? Perhaps not, but, good lord, how can you not discuss something as ridiculous as this friggin' Brentwood Hello? Simpson referred to it as "crap" in a CNN interview and claimed that Resnick wasn't actually that close with Brown.
One thing that is certain, however, is that Connie Britton was thriving on American Crime Story as she snacked on a carrot and claimed as Resnick that her friendship with Brown included a lot of cocaine-fueled partying during the Feb.
James Corden on The Late Late Show with James Corden is having the most fun watching and dissecting American Crime Story and as a resident of Brentwood, joked about this mythical greeting on his late-night show after the " Percent Not Guilty" episode aired. While I'm much more inclined to agree with Corden band leader Reggie Watts that a Brentwood Hello is probably most likely to be a person just saying, "Hi, I've got money," this whole Brentwood Hello shenanigan is real.