Wendy Williams set to appear on ‘The View’ after begging for help

Wendy Williams is headed back to primetime.
The former television host, 60, is set to appear on “The View” on Friday, per the talk show’s guest listing for this week.
Williams will make a phone call to the show to speak with co-hosts Whoopi Goldberg, Joy Behar, Sunny Hostin, Sara Haines, Ana Navarro and Alyssa Farah Griffin.
Also on the call will be Ginalisa Monterroso, the founder and president of Connect Care Advisory Group, which aims to helps patients and caregivers navigate their benefits.
The Post contacted Williams’ lawyer, who declined to comment.
The interview comes on the heels of the radio personality tossing a handwritten note begging for help out of the window of her New York assisted living facility on Monday.
“Help! Wendy!!” the message read.
At the time, police and law enforcement sources told The Post that the call came in around 11:15 a.m. after Williams tossed the note from her fifth-story room.
She was later spotted waving her arms while on the phone in front of her window.
Williams was then taken to Lenox Hill Hospital, where it was reportedly determined that her mental capacity was intact despite a previous aphasia and frontotemporal dementia diagnosis.
“The Wendy Williams Show” alum has been staying in the facility’s pricey memory care unit while fighting to end her court-ordered guardianship.
Williams underwent a psychological examination called a “capacity test” at the hospital and scored a “10 out of 10,” answering all 10 questions used to determine whether she was alert and oriented correctly, per TMZ.
Doctors, meanwhile, did not allegedly conduct any tests that could indicate whether she was misdiagnosed.
Back in January, Williams’ loved ones launched a GoFundMe to raise $50,000 for the star’s new legal team.
After the GoFundMe was created, her niece, Alex Finnie, called into “The Breakfast Club” to address the claims that her aunt was cognitively impaired and wanted her freedom from the controversial guardianship.
During the call, Williams compared the guardianship to a “prison.”
She said that although she can call her people, they are unable to call her. She also has zero access to the internet via a laptop or iPad.
Along with the isolation, Williams insisted that she’s “not cognitively impaired,” noting, “Do I seem that way, goddamn it?”
“My life is f – – ked up,” she continued. “I feel like I’m in prison. I’m definitely isolated. I keep the door closed, I watch TV, listen to the radio and look out the window. Sit here as my life goes by.”
“I’m in this place where the people are in their 90s and their 80s and their 70s,” Williams explained. “There’s something wrong with these people here on this floor.”
The GoFundMe goes into explicit detail about what is allegedly going on in the New Yorker’s life.
“For far too long, Wendy has faced the challenges of being unjustly placed under guardianship and labeled as incapacitated, despite her strong will and determination to live her life independently,” the description reads in part.
“Her current situation is not only unfair but also deeply isolating. The guardian assigned to her has severed her connections with friends and family, leaving her without the support network she so desperately needs. This isolation in New York has made it increasingly difficult for her to maintain her strength and resilience.”
Urging the public for help, the GoFundMe page concluded: “Your generous contribution can make a profound difference! By uniting in solidarity, we can help speed up Wendy’s homecoming and ensure she no longer has to endure the pain of loneliness and disconnection.”