Savannah Chrisley Issues Warning to Co-Hosts Ahead of Guest Stint on The View
Savannah Chrisley has signaled she won’t be backing down when she sits at a familiar daytime table. Days before guest-hosting a daytime talk show, she posted that she remains committed to her principles and has not forgotten critical comments leveled at her family in earlier conversations on the program.
Chrisley’s message: faith, family and no amnesia
In a social-media post previewing her on-air turn, Chrisley said she is prepared for pushback and willing to engage with hosts who disagree. She wrote that she believes in "sitting at tables with people who disagree with you" while "refusing to shrink your values to make others comfortable. " She reiterated her allegiance to "faith, family, and freedom, " adding that she hopes the week fosters "more unity and less division. "
At the same time, Chrisley made clear she remembers earlier public critiques of her family and will not pretend those moments never happened. "Grace does not require amnesia, " she said, framing her appearance as both conciliatory and cautious.
On a later episode of her own podcast, she revisited the issue, criticizing the daytime show's personalities for what she described as unfair attacks on her family. She recalled on-air comments that had questioned how her parents secured presidential pardons and said those moments had left an impression. Despite the tension, she emphasized she is stepping outside her comfort zone to take the seat and is optimistic about how the exchanges will go.
Context: earlier on-air critiques and the pardon debate
The warning arrives after hosts on the talk show dissected the presidential pardons granted in May 2025 to her parents, Todd and Julie Chrisley. Hosts criticized the pardons as emblematic of a broader problem in which wealthy or high-profile individuals receive special treatment, calling for Americans not to normalize what they deemed improper behavior. One long-time host warned against accepting such actions as standard and urged viewers not to let them become customary.
Those on-air exchanges included blunt language about ethics and fairness, and they prompted public pushback from Savannah, who said the commentary amounted to a public bashing of her family. The back-and-forth has set a clear expectation that the upcoming guest-hosting week could be combative at points, even as Chrisley hopes for civil dialogue.
What to expect during the guest-hosting week
Chrisley is among several guests stepping in while a regular co-host is on maternity leave. The schedule includes other familiar faces, including former co-hosts who will also appear during the period. Chrisley said she is looking forward to the challenge and believes her faith will sustain her through the conversations.
She acknowledged the dynamic will be different from spaces where conversation and viewpoint align and framed her appearance as an opportunity to represent a different perspective. "I’m going outside my comfort zone by going on a show where there’s four or five women who all believe one way, and I believe differently, " she said, adding that she expects to be guided throughout the experience.
Producers and viewers will now be watching how the show manages the tension between past commentary and present engagement. Whether the week leads to constructive exchange or renewed clashes, Chrisley has made it clear she will hold to her values while not forgetting previous public criticisms of her family.