Crime Rob Reiner and His Wife Michele Were Killed by Their Son: (Exclusive Sources) - Rob Reiner and his wife Michele were found dead in their Los Angeles home by their daughter, Romy, multiple sources tell PEOPLE. Allegedly killed by his son Nick. The son is in custody.

Update:

Rob Reiner and His Wife Michele Were Killed by Their Son: (Exclusive Sources)​

Rob Reiner and his wife, Michele Singer Reiner, were found after first responders were called to the couple's Brentwood home at 3:30 p.m.
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By Greg Hanlon
Published on December 14, 2025 10:45PM EST
Rob Reiner and his wife, Michele Singer Reiner, were killed by their son, Nick, multiple sources confirm to PEOPLE.

On Sunday, Dec. 14, at about 3:30 p.m., the Los Angeles Fire Department (LAFD) was called to a home to provide medical aid, the LAFD told PEOPLE. Upon arrival, they found a man, 78, and a woman, 68, dead. Sources confirm the victims were Rob and Michele.

Rob is a director, producer and actor whose career includes some of Hollywood’s most beloved films — from his 1984 directorial debut, This Is Spinal Tap, to Stand by Me (1986), The Princess Bride (1987), When Harry Met Sally... (1989), Misery (1990) and A Few Good Men (1992).

He first became famous for his role as Mike on the Norman Lear TV sitcom All in the Family.

Rob was born in the Bronx, N.Y., in 1947. His father was legendary comedian Carl Reiner and his mother was actress and singer Estelle Lebost.

Rob and Michele met when Rob directed When Harry Met Sally, and the couple married in 1989 before having three children.

Previously, Rob was married to the late Penny Marshall, who died in 2018 at age 75 of complications from diabetes.

In a 2016 interview with PEOPLE, Nick spoke about his years-long struggle with drug addiction, which began in his early teens and eventually left him living on the streets. He said he cycled in and out of rehab beginning around age 15, but as his addiction escalated, he drifted farther from home and spent significant stretches homeless in multiple states.

Nick told PEOPLE that the chaotic period of addiction — including nights and sometimes weeks sleeping outside — later became the basis for the semi-autobiographical film Being Charlie, which he co-wrote.

“Now, I’ve been home for a really long time, and I’ve sort of gotten acclimated back to being in L.A. and being around my family," Nick told PEOPLE at the time.

https://www.nbclosangeles.com/inves...mansion-owned-by-director-rob-reiner/3815886/
https://archive.ph/8taqT
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An aerial view of a Brentwood home where paramedics and police responded Sunday afternoon after reports that 2 individuals were found dead inside.

Two people were found dead Sunday afternoon inside a Brentwood home owned by director and actor Rob Reiner, multiple law enforcement sources told NBCLA.

The LA Fire Department said a man and a woman were found deceased inside, approximately 78 and 68 years old.

LAPD Robbery Homicide Division detectives were assigned to the case. Several other LAPD officials said they were aware of the investigation but could not share any information.

There is a large police presence at the home Sunday evening.

LAFD paramedics were called to the home on Chadbourne Avenue around 3:30 p.m.

Within a few minutes, LAPD officers were dispatched to the home for a report of an, "ambulance death investigation," which is LAPD terminology when officers are called by firefighters to the discovery of a death.

Neighbors said Reiner and his wife live in the home, and property records indicate they own the home.
 
Ostatnio edytowane:
Was he just a Nicholas Cage tier idiot with money? Google says his estate was worth about 80 million. How they couldn't have gotten him in home medical care is astounding.
Apparently, Hackman was always insecure about his looks, being a movie star without the movie star "leading man" image. Then he started getting older, and that feeling got worse.

Then, like I posted earlier in the thread, he started mentally deteriorating. And I'm sure he didn't want that to be what the vulture paparazzi talked about. So he used his money and fame to get isolation, if not privacy exactly. And that ended up sealing his fate when his younger, caretaker wife unexpectedly succumbed before he did.

Or that's what I believe happened, anyway.
The idea is that we were supposed to sympathize with Reiner's character - a workshy adult male who lives rent-free in Archie's house, eats his food, fucks his daughter and cheats on her with other women too, while Archie and Gloria work manual labor jobs to support him - because he constantly hectors Archie (who we're shown is always fundamentally fair and tolerant to everyone by the end of the episode) for using outdated language or not being aware of the latest campus fads. This was actually something a liberal put on television in 1970 and got universal praise from critics for doing.
Well, Archie Bunker was a conscious reframing of a type of blue collar Democrat guy from the time period. With one successful TV show, Lear made insular, anti-intellectual, racist working class, unionized right-wingers a thing. Which they largely were not at the time.

And The Norman Lear Center continues to consult on other people's scripts today to insert "socially responsible" messaging.
 
Ostatnio edytowane:
I won't grave dance, but if I had to guess. His son was so fucking tired of hearing about Trump the last decade and cracked. It's gotta be 90% of the discussion in that household.
 
I doubt it. It's more like his parents were absent his entire life and never saw him start snorting coke when he was in middle school. Emotionally and physically distant parents more obsessed with their careers than being parents.
I stand by the opinion that even if he didn’t molest his own kids he molested some kids.
 
Yeah ... Not a good look.

Him just offering his condolences is more than enough to get the left raging if that's what he wanted to do.

There's just no positive to it, no matter how justified Trump might feel in gravedancing someone who'd personally attacked him for the last decade.

The only benefit I can think of -- and this is a stretch -- is that he'll get tut-tutted by people who shit all over Charlie Kirk's corpse, and they'll have their ugly tweets brought squealing back into the light. But that's not very much payoff for a fuckton of risk. Only the Catturds of the world will chuckle at this.
 
There's just no positive to it, no matter how justified Trump might feel in gravedancing someone who'd personally attacked him for the last decade.

The only benefit I can think of -- and this is a stretch -- is that he'll get tut-tutted by people who shit all over Charlie Kirk's corpse, and they'll have their ugly tweets brought squealing back into the light. But that's not very much payoff for a fuckton of risk. Only the Catturds of the world will chuckle at this.

Rob Reiner's reaction to Charlie Kirk's assassination was one of the VERY FEW respectful ones from the left, too.

I'm all about Trump trolling, but this is just creating ammo for the left and the mainstream media at this point. Trump should be smarter than this.
 
Supposedly the charm of Archie Bunker was down to Carrol O'Connor himself, who was indeed pretty far left. But he was also a classically trained actor, and from what I understand point blank refused to give Lear the strawman rightwing racist he wanted. He insisted on finding Archie's humanity beneath the nastiness, and he played it that way. I doubt Lear wanted a lovable bigot with a heart of gold, but that's what he got, and if not for that I'd be willing to bet All in the Family would be completely forgotten today, just one more piece of slimy hamfisted agitprop.

Lear didn't really even create the show as such. He copied it from a British show "Til Death do Us Part". The Archie character was meant to just be a dumb working-class guy who said dumb things with the other three characters just feeding him lines. I agree with you that Carrol O'Conner contributed alot of depth to the character and ended up pushing the show away from the simple comedy format that was intended.

Part of the unintended early appeal of the show was that O'Conner could do the whole "working class" character in a way that really resonated with the lives of alot of people at the time. And did so in a way that was completely alien to anything that had been on television previously.
 
Rob Reiner's reaction to Charlie Kirk's assassination was one of the VERY FEW respectful ones from the left, too.

I'm all about Trump trolling, but this is just creating ammo for the left and the mainstream media at this point. Trump should be smarter than this.
The time for being empathetic is over after the reaction to Kirk getting his neck blown out.
 
What's the non-kosher info on this guy? I'm not reading words from people dot com or niggerpedia
 
I don't get that impression at all. When would they have found the time to be hands-on and present, when both of them were always working?
Lmao, you make it sound like Rob was pulling shifts at the factory and his SAHW was a waitress. They were wildly successful and rich when they had kids. When you are as successful as Rob the work is custom tailored to your needs and schedule. They would have shut down movie sets so Rob could go watch t-ball practice. Besides by the late 90’s (when the kids were small) Rob wasn’t on some grueling schedule. After his kids were born he made like three movies for the next decade - so a few months of work on set at most out of a decade. He would have mostly taken meetings and phone calls and enjoyed being a mega rich Hollywood director that could do whatever the fuck he wanted.

Rob had made it to the top, then he had kids. His ambitious, hard working years where he had to earn his position were over by the time his first kid was born.

His wife was a SAHM. Maybe she did some photography for fun after she had kids, but raising kids was her full time job.

Nick’s biggest issue was being from a wildly successful, beloved family (Rob’s dad was extremely famous) but he was nothing like his family (because his brain was obviously fucked up)
 
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