Pamela Anderson wasn’t keen on rubbing elbows with Seth Rogen at the Golden Globes this past Sunday.

Pamela Anderson said she "felt yucky" being near Seth Rogen at the Golden Globes.{ }Photo by Amy Sussman/Getty Images)

Pamela Anderson said she “felt yucky” being near Seth Rogen at the Golden Globes.{ }Photo by Amy Sussman/Getty Images)

Anderson told Andy Cohen on his Sirius XM radio show that she left the ceremony after presenting the Best Actress in a Motion Picture Musical or Comedy to Rose Byrne and “went right to bed,” especially after seeing Rogen in the audience.

Her issue with Rogen stems from the Hulu series “Pam & Tommy,” which he produced and starred in a few years ago. Rogen played the man who stole her sex tape with her ex, Tommy Lee, and helped distribute it to the public.

“Like how can someone make a TV series out of the difficult times in your life, and I’m a living, breathing human being over here. Hello,” Anderson told Cohen.

Cohen asked Anderson if she ran into Rogen at the awards show, and she responded, “He was in the pit at the Golden Globes, so we were close.”

Pam & Tommy --  Set in the Wild West early days of the Internet, “Pam & Tommy” is based on the incredible true story of the Pamela Anderson (Lily James) and Tommy Lee (Sebastian Stan) sex tape. Stolen from the couple’s home by a disgruntled contractor (Seth Rogen), the video went from underground bootleg-VHS curiosity to full-blown global sensation when it hit the Web in 1997. A love story, crime caper and cautionary tale rolled into one, the eight-part original limited series explores the intersection of privacy, technology and celebrity, tracing the origins of our current Reality TV Era to a stolen tape seen by millions but meant to have an audience of just two. Pam (Lily James) and Tommy (Sebastian Stan), shown. (Courtesy of Hulu)

Pam & Tommy — Set in the Wild West early days of the Internet, “Pam & Tommy” is based on the incredible true story of the Pamela Anderson (Lily James) and Tommy Lee (Sebastian Stan) sex tape. Stolen from the couple’s home by a disgruntled contractor (Seth Rogen), the video went from underground bootleg-VHS curiosity to full-blown global sensation when it hit the Web in 1997. A love story, crime caper and cautionary tale rolled into one, the eight-part original limited series explores the intersection of privacy, technology and celebrity, tracing the origins of our current Reality TV Era to a stolen tape seen by millions but meant to have an audience of just two. Pam (Lily James) and Tommy (Sebastian Stan), shown. (Courtesy of Hulu)

She added she felt “weird” about seeing Rogen after the release of the series.

“I may have just felt like, ‘I’m not chopped liver over here,’” Anderson said. “I felt a little bit weird about it. And I felt like you know — I’ve been so busy working. I’ve done five movies in the last year. So, I’ve just been busy but sometimes it hits you and you feel kind of down.”

She added, “I don’t know. It just felt like a little yucky. But eventually, hopefully he will, maybe he’ll reach out to me and apologize. Not that that matters.”

Anderson noted that even if she received an apology, she would still have complicated feelings about the series anyway.

Pam & Tommy -- Set in the Wild West early days of the Internet, “Pam & Tommy” is based on the incredible true story of the Pamela Anderson (Lily James) and Tommy Lee (Sebastian Stan) sex tape. Stolen from the couple’s home by a disgruntled contractor (Seth Rogen), the video went from underground bootleg-VHS curiosity to full-blown global sensation when it hit the Web in 1997. A love story, crime caper and cautionary tale rolled into one, the eight-part original limited series explores the intersection of privacy, technology and celebrity, tracing the origins of our current Reality TV Era to a stolen tape seen by millions but meant to have an audience of just two. Pam (Lily James), shown. (Photo by: Erica Parise/Hulu)

Pam & Tommy — Set in the Wild West early days of the Internet, “Pam & Tommy” is based on the incredible true story of the Pamela Anderson (Lily James) and Tommy Lee (Sebastian Stan) sex tape. Stolen from the couple’s home by a disgruntled contractor (Seth Rogen), the video went from underground bootleg-VHS curiosity to full-blown global sensation when it hit the Web in 1997. A love story, crime caper and cautionary tale rolled into one, the eight-part original limited series explores the intersection of privacy, technology and celebrity, tracing the origins of our current Reality TV Era to a stolen tape seen by millions but meant to have an audience of just two. Pam (Lily James), shown. (Photo by: Erica Parise/Hulu)

She acknowledged, “Well, you are free game. When you are a public person they say you have no right to privacy,” adding, “But your darkest, deepest secrets or your tragedies in your life shouldn’t be fair game for [a] TV series. That p—ed me off a little bit.”

For Anderson, the series depicted “the worst time in my life.”

Cohen asked if she had wanted to stare Rogen down or look away and ignore him.

She replied, “I mean you’re kind of already tip-toeing around it. It’s so uncomfortable being around everybody there. I mean a lot of those people [are] even from Malibu days, so I still don’t feel like I belong in those rooms. I feel like, you know, uncomfortable.”

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - OCTOBER 24: Pamela Anderson poses inside Pamela Anderson's "Sonsie Garden" with Shopify on October 24, 2025 in New York City.  (Photo by Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images for Shopify)

NEW YORK, NEW YORK – OCTOBER 24: Pamela Anderson poses inside Pamela Anderson’s “Sonsie Garden” with Shopify on October 24, 2025 in New York City. (Photo by Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images for Shopify)

Anderson said she didn’t make a “beeline for him” but “in my mind, I did. And really told him how I felt,” adding she essentially did kind of stare him down.

But as frustrated as the “Naked Gun” star is with the situation, she insists “everything’s good” and added, “I mean there’s worse things going on in the world.”

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