I imagine that, if youâve never heard of Wendy Bell, you find her anointment as Americaâs Worst White Woman to be suspicious.
âWho is this mystery woman,â I picture you asking, âwho somehow beat Ann Coulter, Abigail Fisher, and Toejam Lobotomy to be Americaâs worst white woman? How is she the LeBron of Karens?â
Suggested Reading
Well, years ago, when Wendy Bell was still an anchorwoman at WTAE-TV (Pittsburghâs ABC affiliate), six people were killed in a horrific mass shooting in a predominately black Pittsburgh suburb. A week after the shooting, Bell went to her Facebook fan page and published what historians now refer to as the âMoby Dick of White Privilege.â (By âhistoriansâ I mean âI.â)
She began with some âthoughtsâ on how she hadnât been able to walk or talk since the shooting, continued by effectively calling the mothers of the suspected shooters âbroke black hoes,â described the shooting with Pulitzer-level black poverty porn imagery, and then ended with a pitch-perfect screed on how a recent family night at the Cheesecake Factory with a smiling and skipping black server gave her hope for us. (If you think Iâm making this up, pleaseâI beg of youâread what she wrote. And even if you donât think Iâm making this up, read it for your own entertainment.)
Bell was eventually fired from WTAE. She subsequently sued them for racial discrimination, and the case was settled.
I thought this would be the last of Wendy Bell; that maybe the only time Iâd see or hear from her going forward would be in line at PetSmart. But Wendy Bell is the Jason Voorhees of white women: Just when you think sheâs finally gone, sheâs behind you with a podcast. She was hired in late 2018 by KDKA Radio, where sheâs had carte blanche to be as Wendy as she can be.This brings us to Sunday, where during a Facebook Live segment of her show, she admitted that she kinda, sorta wants to kill your grandparents for freedom. (Seriously, you need to watch this. Please, please, please, please, please, please watch this.)
Even for her, this is…a lot. The whiteboard, the gestures, the eyes, the sweaterâthis is Peak Wendy. And this is the same woman who said âHe moved like a dancer with a satisfied smile on his face. And I couldnât take my eyes off him. Heâs going to Make Itâ in reference to a teenager at a restaurant who happened to be serving while black.
Social distancing has made me realize how much I took for granted, and how much of that I truly miss. The thought of shopping at Giant Eagle, for instance, induces nostalgia. And today, after seeing Wendy back in the news, I realized how much Iâve truly missed her unique brand of dangerous, triflinâ, batshit crazy. Welcome back, old friend.
Straight From
Sign up for our free daily newsletter.