Megyn Kelly calls out ‘fake’ Beyoncé over Levi’s ad
Megyn Kelly blasted Beyoncé as “artificial” and “fake” after the singer was featured wearing a blonde wig and decked out in denim in a new ad campaign by jeans giant Levi’s — reginiting a long-simmering feud with the pop diva.
“This is the opposite of the Sydney Sweeney ad,” the former Fox News host wrote on X on Tuesday. “Quite clearly there is nothing natural about Beyonce.”
Kelly’s swipe at the Grammy winner comes after an American Eagle ad featuring the blonde-haired, blue-eyed “White Lotus” actress — with the slogan “Sydney Sweeney has great jeans” — drew outcry from the “woke” mob for promoting everything from Western beauty standards to eugenics.
The podcaster, however, took issue with the “Cowboy Carter” singer’s makeover.
“Everything — from her image to her fame to her success to her look below — is bought and paid for. Screams artificial, fake, enhanced, trying too hard,” Kelly wrote.
The Post has sought comment from Kelly, Sweeney, Beyoncé and Levi Strauss & Co.
Sweeney’s ad created a firestorm over its wordplay between “jeans” and “genes,” with critics arguing the double entendre promoted harmful beauty standards and even evoked eugenic ideals.
Over the weekend, President Trump praised the ad as the “hottest ad out there” and celebrated Sweeney’s reported Republican registration.
American Eagle stock has shot up by roughly 30% following Trump’s endorsement and the viral attention.
The company has defended its campaign, stating that the ad “is — and always was — about the jeans. Her jeans. Her story.”
American Eagle emphasized its commitment to celebrating how everyone wears their jeans with confidence.
Earlier this year during an appearance on Australia’s Sky News, Kelly accused Beyoncé of “playing victim” after discovering that the singer’s world tour features footage of the podcaster criticizing her entry into country music.
The host of the SiriusXM podcast “The Megyn Kelly Show” ripped Beyoncé for “sticking her big toe” into country music when the singer’s genre-crossing album was released.
“Beyoncé, who’s on some world tour right now reinventing herself as a country star, is running videotape during the show of yours truly,” Kelly said in the segment, titled “Beyonce Tries Playing Victim.”
Kelly characterized Beyoncé as “another one of the most privileged, beloved women in the world — and richest, based on her own fortune, never mind the man she’s married to,” referencing the singer’s billionaire husband Jay-Z.
Despite this status, Kelly argued that Beyoncé “still has to look for the one sliver where she could play the victim and be aggrieved because big bad Megyn Kelly said something completely milquetoast about her entry into country music.”
Beyoncé became the first black woman to reach No. 1 on the Hot Country Songs chart with her lead single “Texas Hold ‘Em.”
Her “Cowboy Carter” album also achieved massive commercial and critical success, topping the Billboard 200 and ultimately winning both album of the year and best country album at the 2025 Grammy Awards.
Beyoncé’s Levi’s collaboration draws inspiration from classic Levi’s commercials of the 1980s and 1990s, featuring cinematic scenes that include Beyoncé riding a motorcycle, and appearing in laundromat and pool hall settings.
Industry observers have credited Beyoncé’s partnership with substantially increasing Levi’s global sales and brand visibility, particularly among younger, fashion-forward demographics.
Credit to Nypost AND Peoples