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Alec Baldwin's daughter apologizes after conflating Latinx and Spanish while defending stepmom Hilaria Baldwin from cultural appropriation allegations



Ireland Baldwin — daughter of actor Alec Baldwin and actress Kim Basinger — has issued an apology to social media after conflating Latinx and Spanish nationalities while defending her stepmother from accusations of faking a Spanish heritage.

What's a brief history here?

Earlier this month, Hilaria Baldwin was accused of cultural appropriation after social media users insisted that she appeared to suggest she possessed a Spanish nationality.

Social media users took Hilaria — Ireland's stepmother and Alec's current wife — to task over the allegations, accusing her of faking a Spanish accent and blasting her for appearing to never correct habitual reports that she was of Spanish nationality.

On Monday, Ireland Baldwin defended Hilaria in an Instagram video, writing, "It's so pathetic that anyone would wanna play detective, and dig that deep into someone's life that they don't know, don't know anything about, how they were raised, who they were actually raised by. It's just kinda sad and pathetic."

She continued, "[I]t's the holidays, and people are depressed, people are going through a lot. I know I'm going through a lot, personally. And the last thing we really need to do is start s**t and gossip about something that is so, so stupid. And about somebody that nobody really even knows."

"This person has dug up old tweets from Hilaria's high school peers, and they all say one thing about her, that she's really kind, when they reflect back on their experience with her," Alec Baldwin's daughter continued. “And that's because she is very kind, she's a good person. And she's a caring person who's always respected my relationship with my dad. I have a great relationship with her. And she could be a really malicious, terrible, horrible human who tears people down, but she isn't. Hilaria is a wonderful mother who takes great care of her kids, and she takes great care of my dad. And that's really all that matters to me."

In a since-deleted post, Ireland Baldwin then added, "I simply want to say this and then nothing more. I am fully supportive of any individual of the Latinx community. I will continue to listen and learn. But I also feel defensive when misinformation spreads regarding my family. I will do better. ... At the same time, I hope that people can start getting information from credible sources."

What are the details?

Following the defense of her stepmother, Ireland took to Instagram once more and revealed that many people remarked on her original post and blasted her for conflating "Latinx" — which refers to a person of Latin American nationality — and Spanish. Spain is a European country.

In a now-viral Tuesday night Instagram post, the 25-year-old model said that the topic of "cultural appropriation" is an important one, and thanked her followers for "sharing with me ways I can do better."

She began, "I moved out of a major city with the intention of escaping the public eye in a small but significant way. I couldn't take a deep breath in Los Angeles and was dealing with a great deal of anxiety that I didn't know how to manage. Stories come out about my family members that often times are fabricated or blown out of proportion.

"I've spent so much time getting worked up and upset seeing people dig into my parent's [sic] divorce and relationship history, into my past having visited a mental rehabilitation facility, and so many PRIVATE ordeals made public," she continued. "That's the thing I can say that most of you don't understand... what it's like to have your family's private affairs aired out and analyzed by millions of strangers.

"Now the purpose of this isn't to ask for any kind of sympathy," Baldwin added, "I simply want to point out a couple of things. 1. Like I mentioned yesterday, I do love my step mom very much. I think she's a strong, kind, and caring human being. Without saying anything further on all of this, I think it is her business and not my own to discuss her family background and answer your questions."

She continued, "2. I really appreciate the Instagram friends in my DMS [sic] who have been very open and honestly having discussions about cultural appropriation, the right terms to address their communities, and sharing with me ways that I can do better. 3. I don't see the significance in bullying anyone. Yes, it's important to educate. And YES it's beyond ok to express frustration and confusion and anger... but I think sending threatening messages isn't really going to get any kind of message across either."

She concluded, "4. I appreciate those who are patient with me. I don't have a publicist or a team of people who are all writing my posts and gathering my thoughts and making them as politically correct as possible... I'm going to f*** up. I'm a flawed human being who is still deep in this learning journey. I apologize to those who are dealing with any kind of hurt during these times and I hope you have a Happy New Year."

Has Hilaria responded to any of this?

On Tuesday night, Hilaria took to her own social media channel and addressed the ongoing controversy.

In a video, she said, "Yes I am a white girl, my family is white … Europe has a lot of white people in them. Ethnically I am a mix of many, many things."

Hilaria also referred to herself as a "different kind of Bostonian."

"[Y]ou can't change your background and nor would I want to," she insisted. "This is who I am, and this is my life story … it's my weird mix of who I am."

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Alec Baldwin's wife hit with allegations that she has lied for years about her Spanish heritage



Hilaria Baldwin, the wife of actor Alec Baldwin, has been hit with a barrage of accusations claiming that she has embellished and even falsified aspects of her heritage, with several critics comparing her to Rachel Dolezal, the white woman notorious for falsely claiming to be African American for years.

What are the details?

The Daily Mail reported that "the online frenzy over Hilaria's heritage began on Dec. 21 when a woman tweeted: 'You have to admire Hilaria Baldwin's commitment to her decade long grift where she impersonates a Spanish person.'"

In a thread, the Twitter user posted a series of videos purporting to show Hilaria allegedly faking a Spanish accent during media appearances, such as "pretending not to know how to say cucumber in English."

It turns out that the wife of the famous Trump-hating actor was actually born and raised in Boston to parents whose roots in America go back for several generations, but she has claimed more than once that she was born in Mallorca, Spain.

According to Page Six, her father's American lineage can be traced back to the Revolutionary War. The outlet noted that "after decades of living in Boston with their daughter, [Hilaria Baldwin's parents] retired to Mallorca in 2011 when Hilaria was 27 years old, thus making her on-again, off-again Spanish accent even more bizarre."

Hilaria claimed in an interview earlier this year that she moved to the United States from Spain at 19 in order to attend New York University. The Mail pointed out that "it has since emerged Hilaria, who was born Hillary Hayward-Thomas, attended $64,900-a-year The Cambridge School of Weston in Massachusetts."

People claiming to be Hilaria's former classmates at the school also wrote on social media that she did not have a Spanish accent growing up. Meanwhile, a video from years ago shows Alec Baldwin telling David Letterman on "The Late Show" that his "wife is from Spain," as he does an impression of her thick accent.

Hilaria, 36, addressed the claims as online fervor grew — and more clips surfaced — raising questions over whether she embellished her past. Taking to Instagram, she confessed that her given name is Hillary and explained to her followers, "Yes, I am a white girl. I am a white girl. Let's be very clear that Europe has a lot of white people in there and my family is white."

She added, "Culturally, I grew up with two cultures so it's really as simple as that."

What was the reaction?

Alec Baldwin also issued a video message in the aftermath without tackling the issue head-on, saying Twitter "is a lot of s***."

"There's been a lot of things that have been said lately about people that I love, that I care about deeply, which are ridiculous," the 62-year-old actor said. "I mean, just ridiculous."

But critics were not convinced. The top story on the New York Post Monday night was an opinion piece claiming, "It's not just her name, Hilaria Baldwin's entire life is a fake."

The Washington Examiner's Tiana Lowe wrote that Hilaria "became Hollywood's Rachel Dolezal because of our sniveling, bootlicking press."

Several on social media have admitted to being gripped by the revelations with many saying they cannot turn away from the details. Fox News' Lisa Boothe tweeted, "The Hilaria Baldwin story is amazing. I can't stop reading about it."

Hilaria Baldwin Denies Faking Her Spanish Accent and Heritage www.youtube.com