“Real Housewives of Atlanta” newcomer Brittany Eady seemingly shaded Kenya Moore after the latter admitted to the sex poster scandal that got her suspended indefinitely from the reality show.
“Best part of being authentic, there is no image to maintain. We are all the villain in someone’s story. ,” Eady captioned an Instagram slideshow Friday that included pictures from a glamorous photo shoot.
The post also featured a quote that read, “Sometimes, peace will look like letting people be loud and wrong about you.”
Several in the comments section interpreted the upload to be a response to Moore’s Thursday appearance on “The Tamron Hall Show,” as one person remarked, “You had Kenya so pressed, she was on Tamron acting like the victim. You’re the new Queen of RHOA ️️️️.”
During her sit-down, Moore explained to host Hall, “Hindsight is always 50/50. If I could do it all over again — I believe the photos were very distasteful, and I elevated the situation.”
She continued, “I’ve elevated situations before, and I’ve taken full accountability for the things that I’ve done. I am sorry for what I’ve done. I didn’t have to take it that far.”
In June, the Bravolebrity shocked guests at her Kenya Moore Hair Spa grand opening — which was being filmed for “RHOA” Season 16 — with blown-up images of Eady allegedly performing oral sex.
Initially, Moore denied the incident, telling her Instagram followers, “Believe none of what you hear and half of what you see. The truth always comes to light.”
She then added via X (formerly Twitter), “I would never engage in revenge porn, I have never distributed private images or footage of anyone, nor solicited images owned by others to use to threaten or blackmail. I have always been vindicated. I can’t talk about STORY even with people planting fake news #sweet16.”
However, she copped to the ordeal during her interview with Hall, insisting that her behavior was a response to feeling “threatened” by Eady — whom she did not name — during a screaming match at the party in question.
“Some of the new girls come on, and … they’re trying to make a name for themselves, especially when they’re not really showing up,” Moore said.
“But when you go too far, and that’s what happened — we were having a filming [event], and things took a really dark turn toward me. There was a young lady who was new, and she just was poking the bear.
“And everybody knows the saying that I made up: ‘Don’t come for me unless I send for you.’ That means, simply, I mind my business. I don’t start anything; I respond.”
Moore claimed she told producers she was “concerned” and “scared” about the situation but that nothing was done to remedy it, so she took matters into her own hands.