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what is wrong with jesse watters eyes

Jesse Watters does not appear to have a permanent, publicly confirmed eye disease or medical condition affecting his vision structure itself, but he has talked on air about a serious eye injury linked to makeup getting into one eye and a resulting infection‑related scare that temporarily affected how he worked and whether he could wear contact lenses.

What actually happened to his eye

  • In late 2023, Watters opened his Fox News show with a mock “breaking news” graphic and announced he had gotten makeup in his eye , which he jokingly called a “catastrophic injury” in the TV‑business sense.
  • He explained that the irritation or infection risk meant he had to stop wearing contact lenses for a while and instead appeared on air with glasses, saying he was “not 100%” that night and asking viewers to pray for his eye.

This incident is why many fans noticed his eyes and glasses suddenly looking different, but it was framed as a temporary makeup‑related irritation/infection risk , not a chronic eye disease.

More recent “serious eye injury” rumors

  • Around late 2025, some social‑media and reposted content circulated claims that Watters revealed a severe or possibly career‑ending eye injury , with phrases like “this could be the end of my career—permanently.”
  • Those posts read more like emotional commentary or reposts of a vague statement than a clear medical diagnosis, and there is no widely reported, detailed clinical description of a permanent structural eye problem (like retinal damage or glaucoma) tied to him in mainstream outlets.

In other words:

  • Confirmed short‑term issue: Makeup‑related eye irritation/infection risk that led him to ditch contacts and wear glasses.
  • Unconfirmed or stylistic: Later talk of a “serious” or “devastating” eye injury is not clearly backed by a specific, documented eye diagnosis in reliable reporting.

Why people comment about his eyes

  • Some viewers have also wondered about his shiny, very bright‑looking eyes on camera , which online discussions suggest may be due to cosmetic or light‑reflecting contact lenses rather than an injury effect.
  • This look, combined with the makeup‑in‑eye incident and the glasses phase, has fueled various forum rumors and jokes about “what’s wrong with his eyes,” but those are mostly speculation or aesthetic comments , not medical diagnoses.

If you’re asking from a health‑concern angle, the only relatively clear thing is the temporary makeup‑related eye issue and infection‑risk scare ; anything stronger than that is currently in the rumor or interpretive category, not clearly documented clinical fact.