BY: Walker
Published 2 years ago
Christina Applegate recently attended the SAG Awards while declaring that this was her “last awards show as an actor probably,” and in the process, she brandished a cane that told MS where to stick it.
via: EW
Dead to Me actress Christina Applegate has spoken out against conservative pundit Candace Owens’ resurfaced criticism of Kim Kardashian’s SKIMS clothing line after the brand included a model in a wheelchair in a 2022 ad campaign touting products adapted for people with disabilities.
After a clip from Owens’ Daily Wire talk series made the rounds on social media earlier this week, Applegate — who announced her multiple sclerosis diagnosis in 2021 — hit back at the commentator’s words.
“Yes late tweet. But woke to see the most horrifying thing. This Candace person making comments about companies who see we need help. It’s f—ing gross,” she tweeted.
Yes late tweet.But woke to see the most horrifying thing. This Candace person making comments about companies who see we need help. It’s fucking gross. I thank skims and Tommy and Guide beauty and @neowalksticks for seeing https://t.co/lFiHFuYGY2 you #youshouldknowbetter
— christina applegate (@1capplegate) March 23, 2023
She continued, “Candace Owens, do you know when you have seen pictures of me how f—ing hard it was to get my clothes on? A team has to help me!!! So I’m excited for accessibility clothing for me and my community.”
Going to try and sleep but my rage is keeping me awake. Candace Owens, do you know when you have seen pictures of me how fucking hard it was to get my clothes on? A team has to help me!!! So I’m excited for accessibility clothing for me and my community.Hope u wake
— christina applegate (@1capplegate) March 23, 2023
After sending the first two messages, Applegate followed up with another message. “If Candace wants to get on the phone with me to be educated on being disabled. I will not come with anger. I will come with love. Because she needs to hear that. I pray for her tonight.”
I thought my last tweet was enough. But then my heart said something else. No rage. If Candace wants to get on the phone with me to be educated on being disabled. I will not come with anger. I will come with love. Because she needs to hear that. I pray for her tonight.sincerely
— christina applegate (@1capplegate) March 23, 2023
Owens called SKIMS’ Adaptive campaign an example of societal “ridiculousness” when it comes to inclusion of different body types.
“I don’t really understand how far we’re going to take this inclusivity thing. I really don’t get it. I don’t know. If I’m wrong, again, educate me, today, I just want to be educated in the comments,” she said in the clip below. “Why did they do this? I don’t know, I don’t know why this needs to be done. I’m getting tired of this all-inclusivity thing.”
https://twitter.com/ViralMaterialz/status/1638666016376115200?s=20
The model in the campaign Owens spoke out against, Haleigh Rosa, recently told Forbes how she felt about the conservative personality’s sentiment.
“After getting injured I remember not seeing anyone like me in campaigns. At the same time, I was relearning simple tasks like clothing myself. It would have been so helpful to see someone in a wheelchair; I’m so happy that we’re finally coming around. Seeing someone like you matters; representation matters,” she told the publication. “It’s so often assumed that the disability community should be felt bad for. The people I know that have disabilities are some of the most resilient people. Wheelchair users will not agree with [Owens’] views. If [Owens] truly wants to educate herself, she can reach out to me. I’m not one for cancel culture; I believe in the power of education. I’d love to have a conversation and educate Candace.”
In a follow-up video shared Wednesday, Owens — who also came under fire in 2022 for wearing a “White Lives Matter” shirt alongside Kanye West at a fashion show — addressed blowback over her earlier comments.
“Let’s debunk the idea that I’m an ableist. I thought that was really, really interesting, that I somehow wanted to pursue disabled people and I somehow wanted them out of spaces. That is absolute nonsense,” she said. “I’ve spent my entire life fighting the idea that, in order for me to feel like I’m allowed to be Black or that I’m allowed to be a woman, I need to therefore see Black women everywhere. That is the opposite of what it means to actually have confidence. I don’t need to see Tyra Banks being a model. I don’t need to see Tyra Banks wearing underwear.”