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Crocodile tears

After Massive Backlash, Beauty Mogul Huda Kattan 'Apologizes' for Praising the Iranian Regime | WATCH

 Iranians deserve better than half-baked regrets from a beauty boss who's more concerned with her brand's glow-up than the real fight for freedom. Time to blend out this mess, Hudam preferably off our feeds.

Huda Kattan
Huda Kattan

In the glittering world of beauty influencers, where every contour and highlight is meticulously crafted to perfection, Huda Kattan has long positioned herself as more than just a makeup mogul. She's the self-anointed activist, the voice for the voiceless, the Iraqi-American entrepreneur who sprinkles her Instagram feed with calls for justice, usually when it aligns with her brand's bottom line. But oh, how the mighty fall when their "activism" gets tangled in the web of real-world geopolitics.

Enter Kattan's latest fiasco: reposting a pro-Iranian regime video that could have been scripted straight from Tehran's propaganda playbook, followed by an "apology" so tepid and self-serving it makes one wonder if she's auditioning for a role in a bad reality show.

Let's recap the drama. On January 28, 2026, Kattan shared a clip from TRT World, a network not exactly known for its unbiased take on Middle Eastern affairs, depicting regime loyalists in Iran torching images of exiled Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi, U.S. President Donald Trump, and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. This amid nationwide protests where Iranian women and dissidents are risking their lives to topple a theocratic dictatorship infamous for executions, repression, and exporting terror. To many Iranians, this wasn't just a "whoops" moment; it was a slap in the face, amplifying the very regime that's murdered thousands in its crackdown.

Kattan, ever the quick deleter, yanked the post within hours as the backlash erupted. But then came the "explanation"—a series of tearful Instagram Stories where she insisted she's "not against the Iranian people" and doesn't support the Islamic Republic.

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Sounds reasonable? Not so fast. In the same breath, she confessed she "doesn't know enough about the regime" to criticize it fully, while waxing poetic about the horrors of foreign intervention, citing her native Iraq as Exhibit A. Translation: "I'm anti-war, guys, but don't ask me to pick a side against the mullahs who stone women and hang dissidents." It's the kind of fence-sitting that would make a contortionist jealous.

Oh, and the cherry on top? Kattan apologized if her post was "misconstrued," but stopped short of actually owning the blunder. No clear condemnation of the regime's atrocities, no acknowledgment that reposting state-aligned drivel during a human rights crisis might just be, you know, tone-deaf at best and complicit at worst. Instead, we get the classic influencer dodge: emotional videos, vague platitudes, and a plea for understanding. "People are angry at me because they think I support the regimem that's just wild!" she whined. Wild? Honey, what's wild is building a billion-dollar empire on empowerment while turning a blind eye to a regime that literally polices women's hair.

This isn't Kattan's first rodeo in the activism arena. She's been vocal about Palestine and other causes, which is fine, until it veers into selective outrage. Burning Netanyahu's image? Apparently shareable. But the regime's mass executions? Crickets, followed by "I don't know enough."

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It's the epitome of performative wokeness: loud on trendy issues, mumbling excuses when it might alienate a market segment. And let's not forget the boycott calls now rippling through the beauty community, with Iranian influencers and consumers smashing Huda Beauty products in protest videos that are more satisfying than any unboxing reel. Retailers are feeling the heat, and suddenly Kattan's "non-apology" smells like damage control for her "Huda Ugly" empire, as one critic aptly renamed it.

In the end, Kattan's saga is a cautionary tale for every influencer who fancies themselves a geopolitical pundit. Stick to contour kits and highlighters, or at least do your homework before hitting "share." Her "apology" isn't redemption; it's a glossy coat of denial over a foundation of hypocrisy.

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