"Tonight's episode is going to be very tough for me," Kim wrote about the Paris episode. "However, I thought it was important to share this story through my eyes & not in an interview where my own words could be twisted. I have always shared so much & I'm not going to hold back when this was probably one of the most life changing experiences for me."
The Kardashians became famous precisely because they chose to exhibit some of the most intimate moments of their lives on their E! reality show. It was there you could see Kim get an X-ray of her butt to prove it was real or watch Kourtney give Khloe a Brazilian wax or Kourtney concluding her labor by pulling the baby out herself.
When the show first hit the airwaves in 2007, Twitter was just an infant, and Instagram and Snapchat were still twinkles in their creators' eyes. A reality TV show was the best, and truly only, way to give the public a constant stream of footage depicting a person's day-to-day life.
But since then, some of the biggest moments in the family's lives are playing out for all to see on real time in social media, so by the time an episode airs, the shock element has evaporated. It only makes sense that the ratings have been sagging, too. The show once easily averaged 2 million viewers an episode. Kim's wedding to Kris Humphries attracted a record 10.5 million viewers. Now, hitting 1.4 million — which the show did in January — is a major feat. (And the show still came in No. 2 on cable that night, behind "Real Housewives of Atlanta.")
So, in 2018, what can KUWTK even offer?
By not saying much publicly about the media firestorm and rumors of Thompson's infidelity, the Kardashian-Jenner family would be preserving any scintillating footage for a future episode, if it chose to air one.
At the moment, the public is incredibly interested in any direct Kardashian-Jenner response to this saga. The question is, will folks still be by the time "Keeping Up With the Kardashians" returns with a new season?