Amanda Seyfried Stands Firm, Says She Won’t Apologize for Calling Charlie Kirk ‘Hateful’

Amanda Seyfried Stands Firm, Says She Won’t Apologize for Calling Charlie Kirk ‘Hateful’

Amanda Seyfried isn’t sorry for speaking her truth. In an interview with Who What Wear, the actress said she refuses to apologize for calling Charlie Kirk “hateful” after the Turning Point USA co-founder was shot and killed earlier this year.

In September, Seyfried commented on an Instagram post about Kirk’s death, writing, “He was hateful.” There was an immediate backlash and she shared her own post clarifying her comment the following day. She said she doesn’t regret writing it.

SUPPORT THE FAMILY, GOD BLESS YOU

“I’m not fucking apologizing for that. I mean, for fuck’s sake, I commented on one thing,” she told Who What Wear. “I said something that was based on actual reality and actual footage and actual quotes. What I said was pretty damn factual, and I’m free to have an opinion, of course. Thank God for Instagram. I was able to give some clarity, and it was about getting my voice back because I felt like it had been stolen and recontextualized—which is what people do, of course.”

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Kirk was fatally shot in the neck on Sept. 10 while speaking at an event in Utah. The response to his death cause significant upheaval on both sides of the aisle. Seyfried quickly clarified her original comment, noting in an Instagram caption that she didn’t “want to add fuel to a fire.” “I just want to be able to give clarity to something so irresponsibly (but understandably) taken out of context,” she wrote.

“We’re forgetting the nuance of humanity,” her post read. “I can get angry about misogyny and racist rhetoric and ALSO very much agree that Charlie Kirk’s murder was absolutely disturbing and deplorable in every way imaginable. No one should have to experience this level of violence. This country is grieving too many senseless and violent deaths and shootings. Can we agree on that at least?”

Numerous Hollywood figures reacted publicly to Kirk’s death, including Jamie Lee Curtis, who cried while discussing the controversial activist on Marc Maron‘s WTF podcast. “I disagreed with him on almost every point I ever heard him say,” she said. “But I believe he was a man of faith, and I hope in that moment when he died that he felt connected to his faith. Even though I find what his ideas were abhorrent to me, I still believe he’s a father and a husband and a man of faith, and I hope whatever ‘connection to God’ means, that he felt it.”

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