Sydney Sweeney has likely been happier. The Gen Z breakout star of the buzzy HBO shows “Euphoria” and “White Lotus” was swarmed with criticism recently after fans noticed a man wearing a Blue Lives Matter shirt in one of the photos she posted on Instagram to commemorate her mother’s 60th birthday over the weekend. Critics also pointed out that photos from the celebration showed partygoers donning MAGA-style hats emblazoned with “Make Sixty Great Again,” according to photos from her brother’s public Instagram account.
“You guys this is wild. An innocent celebration for my moms milestone 60th birthday has turned into an absurd political statement, which was not the intention,” Sweeney tweeted on Saturday. “Please stop making assumptions.”
The symbol of a thin blue line running through an American flag invites the viewer to make very specific assumptions about the person draping themselves in it.
Celebrity pile-ons tend to be over the top, and this one has been no exception. But Sweeney’s naivete is also unconvincing. The symbol of a thin blue line running through an American flag invites the viewer to make very specific assumptions about the person draping themselves in it. Why would Sweeney be surprised at objections to an emblem that signals authoritarian militance and hostility to an inclusive society?
The photo in question — the final one in a series of photos of the party — is casual; nobody is looking at the camera, Sweeney’s eyes are closed and she hasn’t settled into a pose as she stands apart from her mother. The Blue Lives Matter shirt is partially obscured. (The man in the photo has not been identified by Sweeney or reporters, but it’s reasonable to assume it’s a friend or family member of Sweeney’s mother.) The image is not meant to be a declaration of Sweeney’s own political commitments.
Yet many social media users and pundits decided it is. Some commentators saw the shirt as an expression of her own political beliefs or an endorsement of the controversial symbol. One commentator declared the entire affair a “White supremacist party.” Some users counseled Sweeney to sever ties with her family members. These kinds of responses are characteristic of the typical Twitter pile-on: obliterating nuance, ignoring possible intentions, assuming knowledge about her personal life and litigating immensely complex questions — like how we should navigate relationships with family members and friends with objectionable views — with the Manichean worldview that thrives on Twitter but rarely informs real life.
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