From The MAHA Report <[email protected]>
Subject In New Book, UNSCRIPTED, Actress Cheryl Hines Explains Why Personal Integrity Matters More Than Public Approval
Date November 12, 2025 12:03 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
View this post on the web at [link removed]

By Catherine Ebeling, RN, MSN, contributor, The MAHA Report
Cheryl Hines’s memoir, Unscripted [ [link removed] ], published Nov. 11 by Skyhorse, is an unexpectedly powerful story of courage, identity, reinvention, and the emotional cost of standing by the person you love, in spite of outside pressure.
This Substack is reader-supported. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.
It just so happens that the person Hines loves is Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a man who has become one of the most polarizing figures in American public life. But, as Hines articulately explains, she knew from the beginning that choosing to stay with Bobby might come with a cost. She also knew that if she stayed the world would have opinions about it. She stayed anyway.
From its first pages, Unscripted [ [link removed] ] reveals a woman who chooses integrity over convenience, loyalty over comfort, and courage over silence. For MAHA readers, the memoir resonates because it highlights something deeper than celebrity or politics: the human toll of America’s public health wars, the cultural fracture around COVID and vaccines, and the social pressure that has reshaped countless relationships.
One of the strengths of Hines’s book is its honesty about where she came from. She did not grow up in glamorous Hollywood or political circles. She was born in Miami Beach and raised in Tallahassee, far from the epicenter of glamor and fame. Her childhood was shaped by small-town sensibilities: hard work, family ties, humor, and her ability to stay grounded—one of her defining traits.
When she decided to pursue acting, Hines packed up her life, got into her beat-up Toyota Tercel, and drove across the country to Los Angeles with more determination than money. She waited tables, worked whatever jobs she could to stay afloat, and lived in cheap apartments. She endured awkward auditions and inappropriate encounters—the kind that many young actresses face but rarely speak about. Nothing was handed to her. Everything was earned through grit, discipline, and stubborn hope that things would someday get better.
That early resilience makes the second half of Unscripted hit even harder. Hines had finally built a life she loved: a successful, long-running career as the co-star of Curb Your Enthusiasm, creative work she cared about, a stable clutch of friends, and a firm sense of identity. But then she discovered how quickly such a life can fall apart.
Cheryl Hines was introduced to Robert F. Kennedy Jr. by Larry David, her television “husband” — the quirky and brilliant creator of Curb Your Enthusiasm. Hines had long admired RFK Jr.’s work with the Waterkeeper Alliance, but it was Larry David who finally brought them to meet each other in person. Cheryl has joked that Larry later regretted introducing them, but the introduction stuck, and Hines and Kennedy later became a couple.
When RFK Jr. emerged as a central figure in the national debate over vaccines, mandates, and public-health authority, Hines suddenly found herself directly in the path of a cultural storm that was not part of any script she imagined for herself. She writes about the moment when friends grew quiet, people turned their backs on her, invitations stopped coming, and colleagues warned her that being associated with someone like ‘Bobby’ could threaten her career. “Hollywood turned cold overnight—not because of me, but because of fear,” she reflects.
The fear she describes wasn’t about science. It was about social signaling. During COVID, many Americans, famous or not, found their personal and professional relationships strained by their choices and medical beliefs. Cheryl’s memoir captures that experience with a rawness that feels very familiar to anyone who lived through the emotional volatility of the COVID pandemic.
It’s important to note that Unscripted [ [link removed] ] is not a political manifesto. Hines does not turn her book into a debate about vaccines or public health. Instead, she writes about the cultural pressure that surrounded those topics. The way nuance evaporated and conversations became tribal. “The conversation around vaccines became emotional, not scientific,” she observes in the book. Her story is about navigating a world where people are no longer appreciated for their character or intent, but by perceived allegiance to one side or the other.
When Kennedy announced his presidential run, Cheryl once again found her life expanding into the unexpected and unscripted: campaign events, media scrutiny, public analysis of their marriage, and speculation about Cabinet positions. Hines vividly describes the surreal experience of supporting someone she loves while strangers dissect their personal life from the outside.
What emerges most succinctly from Unscripted [ [link removed] ] is Cheryl’s quiet, unwavering loyalty and strength. She doesn’t pretend to agree with everything her husband says. She doesn’t amplify his political positions. She doesn’t paint herself as a martyr or a victim. Instead, she writes with honesty and heart about the emotional weight of being judged for someone else’s views, the fear of losing opportunities, and the challenge of staying true to herself in a culture obsessed with taking sides.
“At some point,” she writes, “you choose public approval or personal integrity.”
That line reflects the real feeling of her memoir.
Why The MAHA Report recommends Unscripted
This is not a book on Cheryl’s political or public health stance; it’s about her human experience. Cheryl’s story sheds light on how opinions on public health have reshaped personal relationships and careers. It illustrates the emotional cost of living in a culture where personal values become identity markers and where dissent comes with grave consequences. Most importantly, it highlights the resilience of a woman who never set out to be a symbol of anything, yet found herself standing firm in the middle of a cultural storm.
For MAHA readers, Cheryl Hines memoir is a reminder that courage is not always loud. It looks like choosing truth over convenience, humanity over fear, and personal integrity over public approval.
Unscripted [ [link removed] ] invites us to reflect on how we treat each other during uncertain times — and how we rebuild when life takes us in directions none of us could have scripted.
This Substack is reader-supported. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

Unsubscribe [link removed]?
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis

  • Sender: n/a
  • Political Party: n/a
  • Country: n/a
  • State/Locality: n/a
  • Office: n/a