About 12 hours later, Gina issued a written apology, which was much more thorough, putting herself on blast and calling the incident "humiliating" and that after watching the video back, she was shaken to her core.IF ANYTHING IT WENT FROM WORSE TO WORSER pic.twitter.com/KhmCr57qYF
— sandman (@ceciIiaparikh) October 15, 2019
It's not the first time Gina has been caught up in criticism about black people, specifically black women. Less than a year ago, Rodriguez was called out for undermining black women by saying they get paid more than Latina women. And whether or not her facts were correct wasn't the issue; the topic itself was triggering and had people up in arms. She apologized for the backlash in January on the radio show Sway in the Morning, noting how "devastating" it was, especially considering her father is Afro-Latino and the "black community was the only community I looked to growing up" because there weren't many Latino shows. "So to get anti-black is saying that I'm anti-family."But then things took a turn when Gina said the black community misunderstood her while the white and Asian communities didn't get mad at her—despite saying earlier in the interview that the last thing she wanted to do was "put two underrepresented groups against each other." And now that she's shared a video on her own platform using a racial slur, her critics are newly enraged since it seems that Rodriguez hasn't learned from her previous missteps.While she has undoubtedly done a great job of repping for Latinx people, it's clear she needs to figure out how to communicate and not come across as ignorant or, worse, bring down other women or POC when lifting up herself and her own community, however unintentional.View this post on Instagram