Big John was all over the Pittsburgh Labor Day parade last year. 2023 is not an election year so no John Fetterman this year either.
In fact it appears that Big John has gone dark. Not a single video of him in THREE MONTHS.
Since he has gone dark, let’s see what Giselle has been up to.
On the job, Fetterman wears a nameplate with her maiden name, Barreto, to minimize the disruption her local celebrity has on the 61 calls she’s done as of August 31. “I do all the 3 a.m. calls, the 2:30 a.m. calls, because I can just go right back to sleep and it doesn’t bother me at all,” she says. More disruptive is what the smoke does to her hair. “I’m like, Oh my God, if I wash my hair today, I’m going to be in a fire tomorrow. So every day I’m like, ‘No, I’m not going to do it.’” Fetterman can go up to 14 days straight without a refresh. “It’s disgusting,” she says before telling me she showered yesterday in honor of our interview.
She is all in on the firefighter gig. Good thing she doesn’t need the $$.
Not everyone in DC is nice!!
Most of John’s D.C. colleagues have been nice to her. “Not everyone,” she notes, before clarifying: “All the wives have been so lovely.” But the muck of Washington is part of why Fetterman mostly stays in Braddock. She will travel down for events like the White House Correspondents’ Dinner, where she was in awe speaking with Vanderpump Rules star Ariana Madix. Fetterman says she tells John, “If you make it fun, I will go to D.C. … If politics is just miserable, I just can’t.”
This one is interesting and buried in the last paragraph.
DIVORCE?? John…Never. Giselle…Maybe.
Recently, after family friends announced a breakup, Fetterman says Karl asked his parents if they would ever get divorced. They responded at the same time. John said, “Never.” Fetterman said, “Maybe.” Understandably, her husband asked his wife why. Fetterman says she told him, “I love you so much, but life happens. And if something were to happen, I don’t want it to debilitate them.” She sees this not as pessimism but optimism. “Whatever comes, we’re going to figure out a way through it,” she says. “There’s comfort in that.”