Micheal Che claims he was hacked after backlash over Simone Biles Instagram posts—but people aren’t buying it

Michael Che (l) Simone Biles (r)

Saturday Night Live's Micheal Che claimed his Instagram was hacked after several derogatory jokes about Olympic gymnast Simone Biles were shared and rated on his Instagram Stories—including one that compared her dropping out of the women's gymnastics team finals to Larry Nassar finally facing consequences for years of sexually abusing Biles and other teenage gymnasts.

https://twitter.com/KirkWrites79/status/1420944732117770240

Though the Instagram Stories have now been deleted, numerous people took screenshots and shared them on Twitter, where the furious reaction to the content of the jokes is still ongoing.

https://twitter.com/balleralert/status/1420864518150836229

In addition to sharing another Instagram user's joke about Biles and Nassar, which he rated a 9/10, and another that used the phrase "Black don't crack" Che—or the alleged hacker—also expressed a desire to make fun of Biles more generally, and the intention of dedicating three minutes to it in a comedy set that night.

https://twitter.com/SorayaMcDonald/status/1420977779609321473
https://twitter.com/CarrieCnh12/status/1420911104046288897
https://twitter.com/QondiNtini/status/1420946297696161793

It was in the face of overwhelming backlash, that included calls to HBO and SNL to remove Che from their programming, that Che posting the claim about being hacked to his Instagram.

https://twitter.com/vivi_in_italia/status/1420906555243909130
https://twitter.com/PiaGlenn/status/1420930611607269381
https://twitter.com/coldestwinters/status/1420906352893890562
https://twitter.com/AmatoBailey/status/1421125690368270336

However, a lot of people don't believe him, citing his history of jokes about women, queer people, and other Black people, as well as the fact that he used the same font and colors as the alleged hacker in his explanatory post. Many Twitter users feel the hacker is an excuse created after he realized "how beloved Biles is," and how making fun of her trauma wasn't going to end in back-slapping laughter.

https://twitter.com/DeliaMary/status/1420960426867712005
https://twitter.com/LeslieMac/status/1420905038533337088
https://twitter.com/Aditiya_renee/status/1421104256086593539

It's also reignited the endless debate about whether rape jokes, and jokes where marginalized people are the punchline, are actually funny. While a minority dragged out the tired claim that it's essential for humanity to be able to laugh at everyone and everything, others, especially women and people of color, did the work of once again explaining why rape jokes, and other humor targeting the marginalized, are harmful rather than hilarious.

https://twitter.com/gracielaa_gomez/status/1421014886851629059
https://twitter.com/NatashaNicholes/status/1421139760177893382
https://twitter.com/arbrummett/status/1420995573147181061

Che has since deleted all of his Instagram posts, but is currently still commenting on the situation through his Instagram Stories.

The post Micheal Che claims he was hacked after backlash over Simone Biles Instagram posts—but people aren’t buying it appeared first on The Daily Dot.


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