Taylor Swift reproached the Netflix platform on Monday for a joke about her love past pronounced in the series Ginny & Georgia, which the singer described as “sexist.”

“Hello ‘Ginny & Georgia’, 2010 called and wants your vague and deeply sexist joke back. How about we stop demeaning women working women defining this shit as fun?” Swift posted on her Twitter profile, where she amasses 88 million followers.

Specifically, the author of Folklore refers to a comment in which one of the protagonists asks the other if she has broken up with her boyfriend, after which she jokes:  “What do you care? You go through men faster than Taylor Swift.

The singer did not like the irony, who recalled that Netflix worked with her on the documentary Miss Americana, which chronicles the turbulent years of the artist’s career and reveals intimate details of her life, while exploring how the public and the press had treated her intimate relationships.

“This costume doesn’t suit you,” she told the platform before adding a “Happy Women’s Month I guess.”

So far, neither Netflix nor the Ginny & Georgia team have reacted to Swift’s tweet.

‘A very sexist angle’

Thousands of followers of Swift, the best-selling artist of the decade, began to ask to apologize to Netflix and the writers of the series immediately after the singer’s message.

In fact, the hashtag Respect Taylor Swift (Respect Taylor Swift) became a trend on Twitter in the United Kingdom and the United States.

And it is that the issue of ex-boyfriends has always bothered Swift, who in 2014 explained the reason why she got angry when a journalist asked her how she felt when people said she only sang about boyfriends.

“I think, frankly, it’s a very sexist angle. Nobody says that about Ed Sheeran. Nobody says that about Bruno Mars. Everyone writes songs about their exes,”
she replied.

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