If the "Real Housewives" can work out their drama, maybe there's hope for Kathy Griffin and Andy Cohen.

The Emmy-winning comedian and TV personality, who had a falling out with Cohen following her controversial Donald Trump mask photo, addressed the current state of their relationship in an Instagram video posted Tuesday, Nov. 25.

Cohen replaced Griffin as Anderson Cooper's cohost on CNN's annual New Year's Eve special in 2017, after the comedian posed with a fake severed head designed to resemble President Trump, which Cooper called "clearly disgusting and completely inappropriate."

The scandal fractured Griffin's relationship with the longtime Bravo executive, who coproduced several episodes of Griffin's reality-television series "Kathy Griffin: My Life on the D-List." Griffin also hosted the eponymous talk show "Kathy" on the network.

In a July 2019 interview with People magazine, Griffin said Cohen was "one of the worst bosses I ever had," adding that he "treated me like a dog." Days later, Cohen dismissed Griffin's claims in an interview with USA TODAY, saying, "She's made up a lot of stuff about me in the past few years that has just been untrue and sad."

But during an appearance at BravoCon 2025 earlier this month, Cohen didn't rule out the possibility of making amends, revealing he and the outspoken comedian had been emailing each other. "Well, I mean, look, I think never say never about anyone," Cohen said, according to social media footage of the event.

"My former nemesis, Andy Cohen, has been talking about me publicly at BravoCon," Griffin said on Instagram. "Someone asked him if he would ever make up with me, and he said, 'Never say never,' and he emailed me this long email, and it was definitely interesting."

Griffin, who did not share details on her conversation with Cohen, said she doesn't "know what's going to happen" with the pair's relationship. However, after Cohen's apparent olive branch, the comic remained optimistic.

"I have a lot of feelings about that because I feel hurt in a lot of ways that I don't think he quite understands," Griffin concluded. "But I appreciate that he said, 'Never say never,' because I did love working at Bravo. And I would love to do a special at Bravo again or a series. Never say never!"

Contributing: Anika Reed, USA TODAY

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Are Kathy Griffin, Andy Cohen friends again? Comic gives feud update

Reporting by Edward Segarra, USA TODAY / USA TODAY

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