In a development that has sent tremors through the gilded gutters of Tinseltown, the assistant to the late, lamented Matthew Perry has been sentenced to 41 months in the slammer for her role in his ketamine-fuelled departure from this mortal coil. The verdict, delivered with the grim finality of a guillotine at a Tupperware party, marks a rare moment of accountability in an industry where the line between ‘medication’ and ‘recreational oblivion’ is as blurred as a starlet’s mascara after a three-day bender.
Let us pause, dear reader, to reflect on the sheer audacity of the situation. Here was a man, Chandler Bing to millions, whose wit was as sharp as a broken bottle, reduced to a cautionary tale involving a horse tranquiliser administered by a woman whose job description probably included ‘fetching lattes’ and ‘ignoring red flags the size of Nevada’. The prosecution argued that the assistant, one Kennetha Ishizu (because of course her name sounds like a sushi menu), procured and administered the drug with the nonchalance of a barista pouring a flat white. She claimed she was only following orders, a defence that hasn’t worked since Nuremberg.
But let us not be too hasty in our condemnation. After all, this is Hollywood, where the moral compass is made of play-doh and powered by desperation. The assistant is but a pawn in a game where the real villains are the enablers, the quacks, the ‘wellness gurus’ who peddle oblivion as self-care. She’s the one who gets the handcuffs while the doctors who wrote the prescriptions are probably off yachting in the Maldives, sipping something that costs more than my monthly gin budget.
Still, 41 months. That’s three years and five months of contemplating one’s life choices while wearing an orange jumpsuit that doesn’t quite match one’s skin tone. It’s a sentence that sends a message: if you’re going to be an accessory to a celebrity’s demise, at least have the decency to do it with a classic drug, like cocaine or heroin, not something that’s primarily used to anaesthetise horses. It’s undignified.
But the real story here, the one that makes my bile rise like a phoenix from the ashes of journalistic integrity, is the gaping chasm of accountability that remains. Perry was a man drowning in a sea of addiction, and the life raft offered by his inner circle was a syringe of ketamine. The assistant is going to prison, but what of the culture that makes such tragedies inevitable? What of the enablers, the ‘sober coaches’ who look the other way, the doctors who treat celebrity patients like walking prescriptions?
This verdict is a band-aid on a gunshot wound. It’s a single raindrop in a monsoon of hypocrisy. But perhaps, just perhaps, it’s a start. Maybe, in some dimly lit corner of a Hollywood producer’s mansion, a thought is forming: ‘If I get that desperate actor his ‘medication’, I could end up in a cell with a bunkmate named Tiny.’ One can only hope.
As for me, I’ll be raising a glass of lukewarm gin (airport quality, naturally) to Matthew Perry, a man whose talent deserved better than a needle and a trial. And to his assistant, I offer this: prison is grim, but at least the gin is probably better there than at Heathrow Terminal 5.








