Aimee Lou Wooden isn’t laughing at “Saturday Night Live.”
The 31-year-old “White Lotus” actress known as out the sketch comedy present on Sunday for the way she was depicted in Saturday’s “The White Potus” skit.
Within the sketch, Sarah Sherman portrayed an exaggerated model of Wooden’s character from the HBO present, Chelsea, by placing on a British accent and sporting prosthetic enamel.
In a publish shared on her Instagram Tales, Wooden wrote, “I did find the SNL thing mean and unfunny.”
In one other slide, Wooden mentioned, “Such a shame cuz I had such a great time watching it a couple weeks ago. Yes, take the piss for sure – that’s what the show is about – but there must be a cleverer, more nuanced, less cheap way?”
Wooden added, “On a positive note, everyone is agreeing with me about it so I’m glad I said something instead of going in on myself.”
The “Sex Education” star then shared a number of screenshots of followers DMs that supported her stance towards the sketch.
Alongside one fan DM, Wooden wrote, “At least get the accent right, seriously. I respect accuracy even if it’s mean.”
“Omg I’ve got THOUSANDS of messages in agreement with me since posting that,” she wrote on one other publish. “Thanks guys. Glad I said something.”
Two hours after her preliminary posts, Wooden wrote, “I’ve had apologies from SNL.”
A rep for “SNL” didn’t get again to The Submit.
The “SNL” sketch poked enjoyable at Donald Trump and his tariffs by parodying the characters from the third season of “The White Lotus.” It starred James Austin Johnson as Trump, Chloe Fineman as Melania Trump, Mikey Day as Donald Trump Jr., Scarlett Johansson as Ivanka Trump and Jon Hamm as Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
Wooden has mentioned earlier than that she doesn’t benefit from the viral chatter about her enamel.
“It makes me really happy that it’s symbolizing rebellion and freedom, but there’s a limit,” the British star instructed GQ earlier this month. “The whole conversation is just about my teeth, and it makes me a bit sad because I’m not getting to talk about my work.”
“They think it’s nice because they’re not criticizing,” Wooden continued. “And, I have to go there… I don’t know if it was a man would we be talking about it this much? It’s still going on about a woman’s appearance.”
Wooden beforehand opened up extra about how her enamel have formed her self-confidence since she was a child in a March 3 Instagram video.
“A big thing for me growing up was my mouth,” she mentioned, “because it was the thing that everyone pointed out, and it was the thing that made me different.”
“Playing loads of different characters has really helped with my self-confidence surrounding beauty. I’ve had to surrender control a lot,” she added. “The more that you can surrender, the more beautiful you feel.”