Caite Upton, J.D. Vance.Photo:Rochelle Brodin/WireImage, Jeff Swensen/Getty
Rochelle Brodin/WireImage, Jeff Swensen/Getty
The woman who was mocked and cyber-bullied after her viral 2007 appearance as a pageant contestant is pushing back against vice presidentialJ.D. Vanceafter he used a clip of her to smearKamala Harris.
Former Miss South Carolina Teen USA Caite Upton was widely mocked when, during the 2007 Miss Teen USA pageant, she nervously answered a question about geography and education.
The footage of her answer went viral, with Upton later saying she contemplated suicide as a result of her near-overnight notoriety and mockery that ensued for some two years.
But the footage resurfaced last week, when Vance — who is running on the Republican ticket alongside Donald Trump — used it to mock current vice president Harris.
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Caite Upton.Paul Archuleta/FilmMagic
Paul Archuleta/FilmMagic
“BREAKING: I have gotten ahold of the full Kamala Harris CNN interview," Vance wrote in a post onX, alongside the viral 2007 footage of Upton. The post was meant to belittle Harris and, in the process, belittle Upton more than a decade years after she first went unintentionally viral.
“It’s a shame that 17 years later this is still being brought up,” Upton said in a statement given to PEOPLE. “There’s not too much else to say about it at this point.”
She continued: “Regardless of political beliefs, one thing I do know is that social media and online bullying needs to stop. For anyone else going through something similar, please visithttps://endcyberbullying.org/and WhiteFlag (https://www.whiteflagapp.com/) as resources.”
Upton has publicly opened up about how her brush with viral fame hurt her mental health, tellingNew Yorkmagazinein a 2015 interview, “I definitely went through a period where I was very, very depressed. But I never let anybody see that stuff, except for people I could trust."
Drew Angerer/Getty
She continued: “I had some very dark moments where I thought about committing suicide. The fact that I have such an amazing family and friends, it really, really helped.”
Despite the outcry over the post, Vance has been unapologetic, tellingCNN, “I’m not going to apologize for a joke.”
As critics have noted, many of Vance’s public remarks target women — with the Republican himself going viral for past interviews in which he has said that women without children are “childless cat ladies who are miserable at their own lives.”
Vance has also come under fire for a 2020 podcast interview in which he and the host discussed “the postmenopausal female,” with the now-senator agreeing that the “whole purpose” of a woman past child-bearing age is to help raise grandkids.
“You know, so many of the leaders of the left, and I hate to be so personal about this, but they’re people without kids trying to brainwash the minds of our children. And that really disorients me and it really disturbs me," Vance, now 40, said in the clip.
source: people.com