Jack Osbourne has some choice words for Pink Floyd’s Roger Waters.
“Hey @rogerwaters f*** you,” Jack, 39, shared in an Instagram Story post on Tuesday, September 2. “How pathetic and out of touch you’ve become. The only way you seem to get attention these days is by vomiting out bulls*** in the press.”
Jack referenced his late father, Ozzy Osbourne, directly as he continued.
“My father always thought you were a c*** — thanks for proving him right,” Jack added alongside a clown emoji. In a second Instagram Stories post, Jack wrote, “#f***rogerwaters.”
Waters, 81, made a comment about Ozzy and Black Sabbath’s music during a recent interview with “The Independent Ink,” which was shared via YouTube.
“Ozzy Osborne who just died, bless him, in whatever that state that he was in his whole life, we’ll never know,” Waters said in the conversation, which took place last month. “Although, he was all over the TV for hundreds of years with his idiocy and nonsense, the music. I have no idea I couldn’t give a f*** I don’t care about Black Sabbath, I never did.”
Waters concluded, “I have no interest in biting the heads of chickens or whatever they do. I couldn’t care less.”
He appeared to be referencing the moment Ozzy bit a head off a bat during a 1982 visit to Des Moines, Iowa.
“I thought it was one of those rubber bats,” Ozzy admitted during an episode of Night Flight following the incident. “I picked it up and it was a real bat, you know?”
Ozzy died at age 76 on July 22, after a years-long battle with Parkinson’s disease.
“It is with more sadness than mere words can convey that we have to report that our beloved Ozzy Osbourne has passed away this morning,”the family shared in a statement to Us at the time. “He was with his family and surrounded by love. We ask everyone to respect our family privacy at this time.”
Jack broke his silence on Ozzy’s death two weeks after his father’s passing.
“I haven’t really wanted to post anything since the passing of my father. My heart has hurt too much,” he shared on social media at the time. “I’m gonna keep this short because he certainly hated long rambling speeches. He was so many things to so many people, but I was so lucky and blessed to be a part of a very small group that got to call him ‘Dad.’ My heart is full of so much sadness and sorrow, but also so much love and gratitude.”