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The white lotus star Eimmi Lou Wood called a sketch on Saturday evening (SNL), which represented it using exaggerated prosthetics “medium and dishonest”.
The British actress said the American comedy program “struck” it and suggested that the sketch was misogist.
In a series of Instagram messages, Wood wrote that she was happy when she laughed “when it is reasonable and in a good mood,” but that “it must be smarter, more nuanced, less cheaper.”
The 31st Wood said she received “apologies from SNL” after sharing her criticism. BBC contacted the NBC TV presenter for the answer.
The role of actress in Manchester’s The third series of white lotus, From this, a group of guests at the resort caused considerable attention to the media, associated with what she calls her “big teeth”.
The SNL sketch, which was aired this week, imagined that US President Donald Trump and his main team are spending time at a fictional hotel.
The Wood Chelsea character was drawn by Sarah Sarman acting, using a pronounced accent and fake teeth.
At one point, referring to the actress’s teeth, she asks, “Fluoro? What is it?”
Wood, who broke into screens in Netflix’s sex education, said that “not thin skin” and realized that SNL is a “caricature”.
“But the whole joke was about fluorine,” she wrote on Sunday.
“I have big teeth, not bad teeth.”
“The rest of the cabbage hit,” Wood added, “and I/Chelsea was the only one who struck.”
She said she did not “hate” Sarah Sherman, but “hate this concept.”
Wood also shared the unnamed user’s comments, which describes the sketch as “sharp and funny” before accepting the “turning into the 1970s”.
“This sums up my view,” the actress added.
She also criticized Sherman’s emphasis, writing, “I respect the accuracy, even if it is mean.”
Wood wrote that she had received “thousands of messages”, agreeing with her from the moment of sharing her messages, and that she was “said something”.
Speaking before GQ magazine last week, said Wood What a conversation that surrounds teeth did her “a little sad because I’m not going to talk about my work.”
“It makes me very happy that it symbolizes the uprising and freedom, but there is a limit,” she said.
Wood added: “I don’t know if it was a man, would we talk about it? This is still about the appearance of a woman.”