Aimee Lou Wood does not laugh at “Saturday Night Live”.
The Acresa “White Lotus”, 31, called the Sketch Comedy Program on Sunday for how it was represented in Saturday’s Sketch “The White Potus”.
In the sketch, Sarah Sherman portrayed an exaggerated version of the Wood character of the HBO show, Chelsea, putting a British accent and using prosthetic teeth.
In a publication shared in his Instagram stories, Wood wrote: “I found the thing of SNL bad and fun.”
On another slide, Wood said: “It is a shame because I had a good time seeing it a couple of weeks ago. Yes, do you have the urine, that’s what the program is about, but there must be a more intelligent, more nuanced and less cheap way?”
Wood added: “In a positive note, everyone agrees with me about it, so I am slippery, I said something that fits myself.”
The “Sex Education” star shared several screenshots of DM fans who supported their position against the sketch.
“My God, I have thousands of messages agree with me since I published that,” he wrote. “Thank you boys. Smooth, I said something.”
Two hours after his initial publications, Wood wrote: “I had SNL apologies.”
A “SNL” representative did not return to publication.
The “SNL” sketch mocked Donald Trump and his tariffs when parodying the characters of the third season of “The White Lotus”. He starred in James Austin Johnson as Trump, Chloe Fineman as Melania Trump, Mikey Day as Donald Trump Jr., Scarlett Johansson as Ivanka Trump and Jon Hamm as Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
Wood has said before that he does not enjoy the viral talk on his teeth.
“It makes me very happy that I am symbolizing rebellion and freedom, but there is a limit,” British star told GQ earlier this month. “All the conversation is just my teeth, and it makes me a little sad that you can’t talk about my work.”
“They think it’s good because they don’t criticize,” Wood continued. “And I have to go there … I don’t know that it was a man who would be talking about this? It’s still happening about the appearance of a woman.”
Wood previously opened more how teeth have shaped their self -confidence since it was a girl in an Instagram video on March 3.
“A big thing for me growing was my mouth,” he said, “because it was what everyone pointed out, and it was what made me different.”
“Playing many different characters has really helped with my confidence in myself around beauty. I have had to deliver the control a lot,” he added. “The more you can give up, the more beautiful you feel.”