Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Jennifer Love Hewitt Offers Bizarre Apology To Fans For Using An Emoji 'Wrong' All This Time

Jennifer Love Hewitt Offers Bizarre Apology To Fans For Using An Emoji 'Wrong' All This Time
Chelsea Guglielmino/WireImage, GettyImages

Jennifer Love Hewitt offered a mass apology to fans after a misunderstanding over the proper use of an emoji.

According to Yahoo News, the 9-1-1 actress was home scrolling through TikTok videos when she came across one that addressed the correct use of the folded hands emoji—which might be familiar if you're thinking of this icon: 🙏.




Hewitt, who is a mother of three, had apparently been using the emoji to convey prayer, all this time.

However, based on the unspecified TikTok video's explanation, the emoji is intended for a use that has nothing to do with faith.

The mortified actress took to Instagram Stories and came clean after learning the emoji, according to the TikToker, actually represents a celebratory occasion marked by two people high-fiving each other.



"Guys, I can't even talk about what I've just recently learned," she said.

"I thought that the hands that are together in the emoji section of the phone, I thought those were prayer hands."
"I have, for a very long time, been sending those to people when I pray for them, when I pray for their family members or their situations, particularly during COVID."
"Praying, sending goodness, love, light."

She continued:

"I did not know and so, this is a public apology to all the people that I have sent what I thought were praying hands to, to say I'm with you."
"I'm praying for you and your loved ones or your friends or your family or for all of us, sending goodness and all of that, and I have actually been high-fiving you the whole time."
"I'm so sorry. I'm 195 years old. I didn't know!"

You can watch her apology video, here.

youtu.be

At the conclusion of her video, Hewitt still had questions.

"Where are the praying hands? Are there praying hands? Because I would like to be able to go back to sending those."

She is not alone in her confusion, as many social media users also seemed to have misinterpreted the emoji.



Some assured her no apology was necessary.





Dictionary.com, addressed the confusion, arguing the folded hands emoji "represents an array of abstract and concrete concepts," and added some of these were positive, like "gratitude, spirituality, and hopefulness."

The website also added the emoji appears differently on certain devices.

On some devices, only the folded hands appear—which is interpreted as a high-five—while on other devices, "the entire upper half of a person is visible."

Dictionary.com


Because emojis can be interpreted in many different ways, it can be overwhelming trying to decide which one to use accurately.

Thankfully, the emoji search bar is a handy tool.

When you type in "pray" or "prayer," the folded hands emoji does appear as it does when you also type in "high five."

You're all good, Jennifer!

More from Entertainment/tv-and-movies

The Creepiest Unexplainable Things People Have Seen With Their Own Eyes

As much as we might not want to admit it, there are some things in life that are hard, if not impossible, to explain.

That's all the harder to swallow when the unexplainable is also horrifyingly creepy.

Keep ReadingShow less
Gavin Newsom; Screenshot of JD Vance from AI-generated video
Tayfun Coskun/Anadolu via Getty Images; @GovPressOffice/X

Gavin Newsom Just Epically Trolled JD Vance Over Tariffs With An AI Video About Couches

California Governor Gavin Newsom mocked Vice President JD Vance—and his love of couches—with an AI-generated video to troll him over the rising costs of goods due to President Donald Trump's retaliatory tariffs.

Earlier this week, Trump announced new tariffs: 10% on softwood timber and lumber, and 25% on “certain upholstered wooden products,” set to take effect October 14. The move follows Trump’s announcement last week of additional tariffs on kitchen cabinets, vanities, and other upholstered products, which will take effect October 1.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots of Kelly Clarkson's conversation with bus drivers from Texas flood
The Kelly Clarkson Show/YouTube

Kelly Clarkson Honors Texas Flood Heroes In Emotional Return To Her Talk Show Following Ex's Death

In July 2025, homes, businesses, Camp Mystic, and more were swept away when central Texas was devastated with severe flooding. At Camp Mystic alone, 27 campers and staff members, including the camp's director, died during the initial flood.

Many people were caught off guard by the flooding and were left stranded mid-flood, getting to the highest ground they could find while they waited and hoped for help to come.

Keep ReadingShow less
Walton Goggins; Pete Davidson
Stephane Cardinale - Corbis/Corbis via Getty Images; Michael Loccisano/WireImage

Walton Goggins Speaks Out After Pete Davidson Predicts Fans Will 'Turn On' Him Like They Did Pedro Pascal

Pete Davidson went viral recently for calling out the weird online backlash to actor Pedro Pascal's unstoppable career trajectory in recent years.

And he thinks White Lotus star Walton Goggins is next.

Keep ReadingShow less
Alabama State University Honeybeez
@the.asuhoneybeez/Instagram

College Announcer Apologizes After Sparking Outrage With Body-Shaming Comment About Plus-Size Dance Team

In the United States, there are 107 Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs)—schools founded when segregation laws and racist policies kept Black men and women from higher education. The schools developed their own unique culture and customs around stepping, marching band, drum majors, and majorettes.

HBCU majorettes march with the band, dance, and have stand battles during games. The dance style and moves are unique to Black culture, but have spread beyond the HBCUs to high schools and dance schools across the country.

Keep ReadingShow less