Jordynne Grace is going directly after an interviewer she believes exploited a mentally disabled WWE fan for clicks — and she’s not holding back.

Grace took to Twitter to blast an interviewer called “Ringcontrol” after a clip surfaced showing a disabled fan being asked about his favorite WWE era. During the interview, the fan referenced the Attitude Era’s bra and panties matches and named current stars like Liv Morgan, Becky Lynch, Natalya, and Maxxine Dupri when describing who he’d want to see in that type of match.

“The Attitude Era had bra and panties matches. This era doesn’t have bra and panties matches. I’d want to see Liv Morgan in a bra and panties match. I’d also want to see Becky Lynch — maybe even Natalya in one. Actually, maybe not Natalya. F*** Natalya. Let’s go with Maxxine Dupri — she’s in my bra and panties match.”

The clip quickly spread online — and so did the backlash. Grace criticized the interviewer for putting the fan in that position, calling him out for exploiting the disabled fan for views.

“Interviewing mentally disabled people you know are going to say some off the wall, socially unacceptable shit for views… it gets to a point”

As the clip gained traction, some users began mocking the fan, while others pushed back against that reaction. One fan wrote:

“The fact that people are making fun of the guy and also saying this is what those types of fans look like, it’s just ridiculous. You can disagree with them and find it creepy, yes, but it’s very evident they are mentally disabled and don’t deserve to be made fun.”

Grace responded again — this time sharing a personal connection that explained why the situation hit so close to home for her.

"Yeah, I have a brother with down syndrome who has “hot girl” posters all over his bedroom walls. Do I find it weird? Yeah, but he’s never gonna understand what we do. Would be horrified if he got interviewed publicly and thousands of people said he should die."

Grace flipped the narrative from outrage at the fan to accountability for the person holding the microphone. In her eyes, the real issue isn’t awkward comments — it’s setting someone up to be a viral punchline. The clip is still circulating, and debate is heating up over where content crosses the line from “street interviews” to straight-up exploitation.

Did Jordynne Grace have a point about exploitation, or do you think the backlash is overblown? Drop your thoughts below.

Felix Upton has over 15 years of experience in media and wrestling journalism. His work at Ringside News blends speed, accuracy, and industry insight.

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