Brooke Schofield faces backlash after resurfaced tweets show her defending Trayvon Martin’s killer

By Abby Amoakuh

Published Aug 7, 2024 at 12:35 PM

Reading time: 2 minutes

60449

Brooke Schofield, an influencer and co-host of the Cancelled podcast with Tana Mangeau, recently released a series of TikTok videos in which she apologised for a number of racist and homophobic tweets she posted when she was a teenager.

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Brooke (@brookeschofield)

Schofield explained that she wrote the tweets in question when she was between the ages of 15 and 18 years. The content has recently resurfaced and embroiled the influencer in controversy due to its highly problematic nature.

@brookeschofield1

♬ original sound - Brooke Schofield
@brookeschofield1

♬ original sound - Brooke Schofield

One of the fallouts of this situation has been Schofield’s brand partner, the clothing brand BoysLie, dropping the influencer as an ambassador in response to the online backlash. The company had an upcoming collab with the podcast host, which was scheduled to be released in just a few days. However, it indicated its intention to rethink the campaign in a recent statement citing that the brand understands “the severity and urgency behind addressing the concerns” of its audience regarding the project.

“We are in a weird position right now,” BoysLie noted. “We didn’t want to end the weekend without saying that we hear you, we see you, and we are adamantly working on a solution.”

T Mobile, another collaborator of the content creator, also broke ties with her.

@riristea

Boys Lie Drops Brooke Schofield Collaboration Amid Her Resurfaced Racist Tweets #brookeschofield #boyslie #riristea #rivetsoro

♬ Breaking News Background Music (Basic A)(1001538) - LEOPARD

Particularly offensive tweets included: “What do you call a Mexican baptism? A bean dip” and “I wish I didn’t have to dress like a dyke for work.”

The content creator also called some of her detractors “F*ggots” and shockingly labelled George Zimmerman’s shooting of 17-year-old African American Trayvon Martin an act of “self-defence.” The incident sparked national outrage about the racial climate in the US and Zimmerman was subsequently prosecuted but ultimately acquitted of second-degree murder. Schofield also added that no one would care about the incident if Trayvon had been white. It conveyed that she had fundamentally misunderstood the larger social-political debate in which the shooting occurred.

https://twitter.com/tankedasfff/status/1819529216016503270

On top of this, Schofield was found to have recently liked a picture featuring former President Donald Trump, casting her in an unflattering light, considering that her older tweets indicated support for Trump during his 2016 presidential campaign.

https://twitter.com/AdinUpdate/status/1821063306242654479

In other words, the last two weeks were a really bad time to be Brooke Schofield.

In her apology video, Schofield responded to the backlash she had encountered: “You have probably seen the tweets that have been floating around. They are not fake. Those are real things that I said. I want to acknowledge that I feel the same way about them that you do. I think they are so disturbing. They’re wrong. They’re horrible and they’re disgusting.”

Schofield also tried to explain the regressive nature of some of her comments to her young, mostly progressive audience: “My parents were addicts, so I was adopted by my grandparents when I was like 10. As is true for a lot of grandparents, they’re a little bit less progressive than a lot of us are now.”

@brookeschofield1

♬ original sound - Brooke Schofield

“I’m very very sorry to anyone who is hurt by the tweets because, obviously they are very hurtful. Sometimes you have these people that you put on a pedestal and you think everyone older than you is smarter than you and knows everything and they do not,” the podcaster said.

The content creator also proceeded to respond and apologise to people online who were commenting on some of her most controversial posts.

Further, Schofield claimed to have donated $10,000 to support the family of Trayvon Martin, the subject of one of her most contested tweets.

@brookeschofield1

Replying to @LaCherry🍒

♬ original sound - Brooke Schofield

Nevertheless, Schofield’s efforts haven’t been well-received so far. In fact, the opposite seems to be true.

Keep On Reading

By Abby Amoakuh

The Summer I Turned Pretty star Gavin Casalegno blasted over liking sexist and transphobic posts

By Charlie Sawyer

Love Island contestants exposed by TikToker for alleged vile and homophobic behaviour

By Fatou Ferraro Mboup

From Beast Games mistreatment to resurfaced racist comments, is MrBeast finally getting cancelled?

By Fatou Ferraro Mboup

Jeffree Star makes inappropriate comment after Kanye West posts disturbing incest confession

By Eliza Frost

Black cat boyfriends are in to replace golden retriever boyfriends, but are they just emotionally unavailable men in disguise?

By Charlie Sawyer

Chris Brown is facing over 10 years in prison. Here’s how his violent past has led him here

By Eliza Frost

All the Tea on the new app that lets women vet men and date safely

By Charlie Sawyer

Call Her Daddy host Alex Cooper accuses former soccer coach of sexual harassment in new docuseries

By Eliza Frost

Netflix’s new Trainwreck documentary exposes the rise and scandalous fall of American Apparel

By Charlie Sawyer

Harry Potter TV series crew bewildered over production’s strange decision on location to film iconic scene

By Charlie Sawyer

Another female influencer has been punched in the head in New York. Is it the same attacker?

By Abby Amoakuh

Julia Fox reveals her ex-husband secretly baptised her son and warns women of loser fathers

By Charlie Sawyer

Johnny Depp plays the victim once more and anoints himself crash test dummy for #MeToo

By Charlie Sawyer

Former Harry Potter star tells reporters he doesn’t understand JK Rowling’s Twitter transphobia

By Eliza Frost

The Summer I Turned Pretty’s Chris Briney is at the centre of a new love triangle, but this time for an audio erotica story 

By Charlie Sawyer

Here’s why Coca Cola is the most boycotted brand on the planet

By Abby Amoakuh

Millie Bobby Brown and husband Jake Bongiovi face backlash for starring in ad promoting Dubai

By Abby Amoakuh

Campaigners call for gamers who carry out virtual rape in the metaverse to be charged as real-life sex offenders

By Charlie Sawyer

Father of former Harry Potter star gives serious warning to the new child stars in HBO Max reboot

By Charlie Sawyer

Mexican beauty influencer Valeria Marquez killed during TikTok livestream in alleged femicide