Tiger Woods' Biggest Embarrassment To Be Exposed In New Tell-All Book [DETAILS]
Tiger Woods is facing yet another humiliation when it was reported that he would be featured in a highly anticipated tell-all book.
According to Page Six, Rachel Uchitel, the golf legend's most famous mistress, is working on a tell-all book with agent David Vigilano. For those who are not aware, this agent is capable of releasing books that truly allow said celebrities or personalities reveal informatioj that could shock readers.
Other high-profile yet controversial figures represented by the "maestro" agency include Michael Jackson, Britney Spears, Courtney Love, and Pope John Paul II.
Vigilano is also notorious for obtaining large advance payments for his customers.
Despite the fact that Uchitel's narrative has been investigated and ridiculed in the media, the agency believes the renowned mistress has something important to reveal.
The tell-all book, according to insiders who talked to the site, would discuss her entire narrative, including the death of her fiancé on 9/11.
Rachel Uchitel's visage had even on the cover of the New York Post, dubbed "New York's Tragic Face."
However, one of the topics anticipated to be discussed is her highly public and scandalous romance with Tiger Woods, which was disclosed by the National Enquirer in 2009.
"Everyone believes they know her story, but they don't," claimed one insider.
In the 2021 HBO documentary "Tiger," she speaks up for the first time about her affair with the disgraced sportsman.
After the Tiger Woods Scandal
After the sensational discovery of her affair with Tiger Woods in 2009, then-married Rachel Uchitel signed a non-disclosure agreement that was more than 30 pages lengthy, prohibiting her from discussing the famous golfer with anybody.
At the time, Uchitel was represented by Gloria Allred, a well-known Hollywood lawyer.
In exchange for her quiet, and under pressure to safeguard a man's name and brand, Uchitel was offered $5 million and a promise of $1 million each year for the next three years.
However, in 2019, she accepted to be interviewed for the documentary because "I wanted to be the one to describe my narrative for once."
She eventually declared bankruptcy and squandered the $2 million she received from the arrangement. However, one of Woods' attorneys disputed her creditor protection so that he could sue her for millions on Woods' behalf for breaching the agreement.