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Martha Stewart admits to cheating on her husband in Netflix doc: He ‘never knew’

Martha Stewart is making a sizzling confession.

In the new Netflix documentary “Martha” by R.J. Cutler, the 83-year-old confesses that she was unfaithful to her ex-husband, Andrew Stewart.

“Young women, listen to my advice, if you’re married and your husband starts to cheat on you, he’s a piece of s–t,” Stewart shares in the doc’s trailer that dropped on Thursday. “Get out of that marriage.”

A producer quips, “Didn’t you have an affair early on?”

Martha Stewart in her new Netflix doc “Martha.” Netflix

She then admits, “Yeah, but I don’t think Andy ever knew about that.”

The pair was married for nearly three decades after tying the knot in 1961. The former couple welcomed their daughter, Alexis Stewart, in 1965 before divorcing in 1990.

“Getting divorced was a terrible thing for me, because we were the first to divorce in my family,” Stewart continued. “And that we haven’t spoken since the divorce is even more painful. But I’m very strong, and I’m very motivated to get on with life.”

The docuseries explores Stewart in a series of intimate interviews, tracing her rise from a teen model to an OG influencer and America’s first self-made female billionaire in 1999.

Viewers also get to see how the television personality rebranded her image after going to prison for insider trading 2004.

“The cookie cutter house and the cookie cutter life, that was not for me,” Stewart said. “I could’ve just been a miserable, has-been housewife, but I didn’t let that happen to myself.”

Martha Stewart attends the Telluride Film Festival on September 01, 2024 in Telluride, Colorado. Getty Images

“I was a trophy for these idiots,” the businesswoman continued about her 2004 sentencing. “Those prosecutors should’ve been put in a Cuisinart and turned on high.”

Stewart sold her stake in ImClone Systems, a biopharmaceutical company, in December 2001, which raised eyebrows for investigators. They questioned her on the trade in early 2002, but she and her stockbroker, Peter Bacanovic, maintained that they had no insider knowledge that prompted the sale. 

However, federal prosecutors later accused Stewart and Bacanovic of lying to the authorities and acting on non-public knowledge when they made the trade.

In early 2004, a highly publicized trial ensued, and Stewart was found guilty of conspiracy and obstruction of justice. The best-selling author was sentenced to five months in prison and two years of probation.

“I had to climb out of a hole,” confessed Stewart in the trailer about reinventing herself after prison.

Martha Stewart for her new Netflix doc which hits the streaming platform Oct. 30. Netflix

“I’ll be back. I will be back,” the chef said outside of the courthouse following her sentencing, per The New York Times. “I’m used to all kinds of hard work, as you know, and I’m not afraid. I’m not afraid whatsoever.”

During her time behind bars, the former daytime host kept her company intact, and less than a year after her release in 2005, Stewart was able to write a book and debut two television shows.

On the day of her release from prison, Stewart wrote in a statement on her website: “The experience of the last five months in Alderson, West Virginia, has been life altering and life affirming. Someday, I hope to have the chance to talk more about all that has happened, the extraordinary people I have met here and all that I have learned.”

Martha Stewart shares the intimate details of her life in new series. Netflilx

“One thing I do not ever want is to be identified or I don’t want that to be the major thing of my life,” she told Katie Couric in 2017. “I was a strong person to start with and thank heavens I was and I can still hold my head up high and know that I’m fine.”

“Martha” premieres Oct. 30 on Netflix.

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