12 Celebrities Who Claim That They've Been Canceled
However, the debate over whether cancel culture is a real phenomenon remains ongoing. Some argue that it is a necessary tool for holding people accountable for their actions, while others believe it stifles free speech and can lead to unjust consequences. Some celebrities claim that they have been canceled unfairly, while others have faced consequences for their past behavior that many view as long overdue. The discussion around cancel culture highlights the complexities of accountability and forgiveness in our society.
Continue reading to find out how they aroused the industry's and/or the internet's anger and what they had to say in their explanation. These celebrities claim that they have been canceled.
#1 Chrissy Teigen
Source: Kathy Hutchins/Shutterstock
#2 Dave Chappelle
Source: Getty Images
According to Deadline, Chappelle reportedly remarked following a standing ovation, "If this is what being canceled is like, I love it. [Expletive] Twitter. [Expletive] NBC News, ABC News, all these stupid [expletive] networks. I'm not talking to them. I'm talking to you. This is real life."
#3 Demi Lovato
Source: Steve Granitz/FilmMagic/Getty Images
"I don't think anyone was ever officially canceled, otherwise certain people wouldn't have Grammys, wouldn't have Oscars … certain people wouldn't be where they are in their positions," they said. Lovato continued, "Cancel culture will not work unless people have some sort of mercy. You have to be able to do that. I think if it's somebody who refuses to learn, just has the entitlement of I can never do any wrong and I can get away with this, then yeah … go ahead and cancel them."
#4 Dr. Oz
Source: answer5/Shutterstock
"Last week The Philadelphia Inquirer had me on their front page as 'Dr. Oz.' This morning they just announced, no more doctors, even though I'm a practicing physician. I'm taking care of patients," He says in the video. "I've done thousands of heart surgeries. They don't want to call me a doctor anymore. I won't be canceled."
The newspaper claimed that the modification was made because, by their style rule, the publication doesn't refer to someone as "Dr." on the first mention, including a headline.
#5 Ellen DeGeneres
Source: s_bukley/Shutterstock
#6 Frank Langella
Source: Walter McBride/WireImage/Getty Images
"Cancel culture is the antithesis of democracy. It inhibits conversation and debate. It limits our ability to listen, mediate, and exchange opposing views. Most tragically, it annihilates moral judgment," He said.
#7 Gina Carano
Source: DFree/Shutterstock
#8 Johnny Depp
Source: Denis Makarenko/Shutterstock
"It's so far out of hand now that I can promise you that no one is safe. Not one of you. No one out that door. No one is safe," he said in his speech, via Deadline. "It takes one sentence and there's no more ground, the carpet has been pulled. It's not just me that this has happened to, it's happened to a lot of people."
#9 Kanye West
Source: Edward Berthelot/Getty Images
He urged everyone listening to "cancel culture," saying that "Obviously, as a celebrity, there's a lot of people that are around me that can influence me and no human being is immune to their surroundings."
#10 Kevin Hart
Source: DFree/Shutterstock
"You're thinking that things you say will come back and bite you on the [expletive]," he said. "I can't be the comic today that I was when I got into this."
Two years after resigning as the host of the 2019 Oscars due to homophobic and transphobic remarks he made in tweets years earlier, Hart made comments on cancel culture.
#11 Piers Morgan
Source: DFree/Shutterstock
Morgan stated, through The Hill, in early 2022, "A year ago today, I was forced to leave a job I loved, at the peak of its success, for having the audacity to express an honestly held opinion. This shouldn't happen in any democracy supposedly built on the principles of free speech and freedom of expression."
#12 Sharon Osbourne
Source: Kathy Hutchins/Shutterstock
"It was tough on me, and it did affect me mentally. It honestly did, because after everything that I felt, all my dreams I had achieved, everything that I'd wanted to do, I had achieved," Osbourne said on Morgan's show in May 2022. "And did I want my legacy for my family to be? 'Oh, well, your Nana was on television, but everybody said she was racist, so she never went on television again.'"
Share this article
Advertisement