After a "brave" drug confession: Charlotte Würdig sticks to ex-husband Sido

In March 2020, Charlotte Würdig announced her separation from Sido.

After a "brave" drug confession: Charlotte Würdig sticks to ex-husband Sido

In March 2020, Charlotte Würdig announced her separation from Sido. The moderator did not reveal the reasons for the love-off at the time. Now it's the rapper himself who is speaking out about the drug addiction he fell into during the coronavirus pandemic. His ex-wife apparently continues to support him.

Charlotte Würdig has commented on her ex-husband's drug confession. In a "Spiegel" interview, rapper Sido spoke openly about his addiction and withdrawal in a clinic and admitted that this was the reason for his divorce from his wife.

In her Instagram stories, the 44-year-old presenter now writes that she has received many inquiries since then, but will only make one statement: "Yes, our marriage did not endure this difficult time, but our friendship is unbroken."

The presenter also supports the fact that the rapper is now public about his mistakes: "I think that Paul is now talking about it so openly and unembellished, not only courageously, but also right."

In the interview, Paul Würdig, the rapper's real name, talks about how he slipped into a deep crisis during the Corona period with sex and drugs such as cocaine, liquid ecstasy and speed. "Everything got out of hand. In the end I was in a rat." The stay in the clinic saved him, as the 41-year-old says: "Without the withdrawal and the physical checks in the clinic, I probably wouldn't have survived this summer."

Worthy had made the love-off with Sido public in March 2020 in an Instagram story. The two married in December 2012. Their first son was born in 2013, and another in 2016.

In an interview with "Bunte", Charlotte Würdig recently spoke about her emotional state during the divorce. She especially remembers the moment when she put her signature on the divorce certificate. Everything "that you dreamed of as a couple, that you wanted to build together" ends up in "another brochure, that hurts," she said. "It does something to you."