An influencer’s attempt to weaponize her live audience and law enforcement at Miami International Airport backfired spectacularly after she accused a group of teens of harassment, only for police to remind her that public recording is legal.
The scene shows the woman livestreaming herself in the terminal when she notices a group of young men recording her behavior. Rather than de-escalate, she confronts them head-on. In fact, she technically assaults one of them by swiping at his phone, which could almost be considered assault.
“This white, entitled, motherfuc*er,” she says on camera, visibly agitated. She then circles one of the teens, who remains seated and calm. “Do something!” she yells, repeatedly emphasizing, “I’m a girl!” as if that nullified the situation. One of the teens simply replies, “Get out of my face.” He states to the camera that because he’s a white male, it’s somehow a problem that he exists.
Viewers in the Reddit thread described the moment as a textbook meltdown. One user, MasterHavik, remarked, “We legit had a Reddit story of r/entitledpeople play out in real time. This is pretty funny.”
As tensions rose, the influencer turned to her phone, talking to her livestream viewers and calling the police. She claimed she was being harassed, despite video evidence suggesting the only aggression came from her side. Once officers arrived, the influencer’s narrative unraveled.
The responding police explained clearly that filming in public is not a crime. That fact didn’t sit well. The woman’s tone shifted from outraged to desperate as she began crying, insisting again, “I’m just a girl!” and that “he came up to me harassing me,” while accusing the teens of threatening her safety. The officers remained unfazed and clearly believed she was the one creating a scene.
“She’s lucky he didn’t show footage of her assaulting him,” noted one Reddit commenter, highlighting the moment she appeared to get physical with one of the teens during the argument. Another chimed in, “Verbal harassment is a misdemeanor… depending on the state, she might’ve crossed that line.”
The incident is a textbook case study in entitlement, with many online users pointing out how the influencer leaned hard into the victim card, only to be exposed by her own behavior.
“She should be fined for this crap,” wrote Mediocre_Doubt_1244. “People abusing 911 this way cost taxpayers money. Just walk away.”
From the dramatic confrontation to the police intervention, the moment served as a reminder that being live online doesn’t make someone above the law or beyond criticism.