Ava Phillippe called out trolls who left hurtful comments about her appearance on Friday.
The 24-year-old daughter of actors Reese Witherspoon and Ryan Phillippe took to TikTok to address “toxic” comments some social media users have left on her posts.
She posted two separate clips: one about people body-shaming her and another about people criticizing her tattoos.
About people commenting on her body, the internet personality, who attended a star-studded Tiffany & Co. event with her mother in Beverly Hills last week, wrote in her caption: “Pretty is beautiful, girls… and body shaming”. [sic] It is simply toxic behavior.
She added: ‘PS: I put “woman” because I see this sort of thing happening disproportionately to girls and young women, but let me be clear; body shaming [sic] It is toxic no matter who the subject is. “We all deserve to feel safe and at peace in the boat we live on.”
Ava Phillippe called out trolls who left hurtful comments about her appearance on Friday. The 24-year-old daughter of Reese Witherspoon and Ryan Phillippe took to TikTok to address “toxic” comments some social media users have left on her posts.
In the video, set to the tune of Just a Girl by No Doubt, she is seen applying red lipstick to her face but then becomes frustrated.
As she rolled her eyes, she smeared her makeup on her cheek before walking away and raising her hands in the air.
About the clip, she wrote: ‘[No big deal] but I just achieved a major milestone as a woman online…
“I saw two different strangers commenting on my body,” she continued. ‘The first one said he should put me on Ozempic because I’m too fat… The second accused me of starving myself because I’m too thin…’
She addressed ‘silly’ comments about her body, adding that her weight remained the same despite varying and unwarranted opinions.
“No one deserves to be distinguished for their appearance,” he wrote. “You don’t always know what someone has been through or what they struggle with.”
She added: “My weight didn’t change in the time period between your comments (and it wouldn’t be any of your business if it did!) It’s nonsense.”
At the end of her clip, she shared a sweet reminder with her viewers.
She posted two separate clips: one about people body-shaming her and another about people criticizing her tattoos. In the clip, she wrote that she experienced a “huge milestone as a woman online.”
She explained that trolls criticized her for her appearance and shared the two shaming comments about her body.
She said one person called her “too fat” and another wrote that she was “too thin.” She said that “no one deserves to be criticized” for her appearance.
In the video, set to the tune of Just a Girl by No Doubt, she is seen applying red lipstick to her face but then becomes frustrated. As she rolled her eyes, she smeared her makeup on her cheek before turning away from her and raising her hands in the air.
At the end of his clip, he left a reminder for his followers, addressing ‘superficial measures’
In her second TikTok clip, she was seen standing outside, wearing a sleeveless camisole with the tattoos on her arms on display.
In the video, an audio clip could be heard with a voice saying: ‘I ask, who is the girl next door? That’s why she’s on the side. I don’t want to meet her. I don’t want to be that
“At the end of the day, it doesn’t matter what anyone else thinks except you.” Posing in front of a wall of greenery, she shrugged, laughed and rolled her eyes.
“But it doesn’t matter who you are…” he wrote. ‘Your beauty exceeds such superficial measures.’
In her second TikTok clip, she was seen standing outside, wearing a sleeveless camisole with the tattoos on her arms on display.
In the video, an audio clip could be heard with a voice saying: ‘I ask, who is the girl next door? That’s why she’s on the side. I don’t want to meet her. I have no desire to be that.
“At the end of the day, it doesn’t matter what anyone else thinks except you.”
Posing in front of a wall of greenery, he shrugged, laughed and rolled his eyes.
She also put a shrugging emoji in her caption and wrote, “When strangers online say they hate my tattoos… #wronggirl #sorrynotsorry.”