Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Chloë Grace Moretz Says She Became A 'Recluse' After 'Horrific' Viral 'Family Guy' Meme

Chloë Grace Moretz Says She Became A 'Recluse' After 'Horrific' Viral 'Family Guy' Meme
Jose Perez/Bauer-Griffin/GC Images/Getty Images

Actor Chloë Grace Moretz was everywhere in the public eye for quite some time, especially after starring as Hit-Girl in Kick-Ass and headlining the high-profile remake of Carrie back in 2013 made her a household name.

But Moretz has maintained a low profile in recent years and it all comes down to having been the subject of a viral meme.


In a new interview with Hunger magazine, Moretz described the experience of having a paparazzi photo of her photoshopped and turned into a Family Guy meme and how it made her so insecure about her body she became a "recluse."

The meme used a photo of Moretz carrying pizzas into a building in which she was wearing shorts and high-heels, showing off her long legs.

Internet jokesters Photoshopped the image, elongating her legs and shortening her torso into an homage to the Family Guy character "Legs Go All the Way Up Griffin"—a woman who wears heels and short dresses to show off her legs that are so long she essentially has no torso.

The Photoshopped version of Moretz was placed next to the Family Guy character to create the meme.

It may just be a silly pop-culture reference for most people, but for Moretz the viral mockery of her body was deeply traumatizing.

Speaking about the meme, she told Hunger:

"I’ve actually never really talked about this, but there was one meme that really affected me..."
“Everyone was making fun of my body and I brought it up with someone and they were like, ‘Oh, shut the fu*k up, it’s funny.’"
"And I just remember sitting there and thinking, my body is being used as a joke and it’s something that I can’t change about who I am, and it is being posted all over Instagram."

She added for a time it ruined one of her favorite parts of being an actor, the red carpet.

“After that, I was kind of sad. It took a layer of something that I used to enjoy, which was getting dressed up and going to a carpet and taking a photo, and made me super self-conscious."

The experience was so traumatizing it triggered a struggle with body dysmorphia, to the point she would sometimes "hyperventilate" if photographed "basically became a recluse."

Moretz said the meme still affects her all these years later.

"And to this day, when I see that meme, it’s something very hard for me to overcome.”

So how has Moretz overcome the experience?

Therapy helped, but so has the forced retreat from public that we've all faced to one degree or another over the past couple years due to the pandemic.

As she put it:

“To say that these past two years have been transformative is an understatement, to say the least. I’m a very different girl than I was. I feel like a woman now.”

On Twitter, people were mostly sympathetic.







Moretz is returning to the public eye in advance of her starring role in the new Prime series The Peripheral , an adaptation of the William Gibson novel of the same name, which premieres next week.

More from Entertainment/tv-and-movies

Ted Cruz; Kelvin Sampson
Alex Wroblewski/AFP via Getty Images; Alex Slitz/Getty Images

Houston Fans Livid After Ted Cruz 'Curse' Strikes Again At NCAA Basketball Championship

In 2013, 2016 and 2021, Texas Republican Senator Ted Cruz was labeled the most hated man in Congress—by members of his own party. In 2023, Florida Republican Representative Matt Gaetz replaced him as the "most hated."

In a 2016 CNN interview, South Carolina Republican Senator Lindsey Graham said:

Keep ReadingShow less
Harriet Tubman
Library of Congress/Getty Images

National Parks Website Restores Harriet Tubman Photo To 'Underground Railroad' Page After Backlash

Following significant backlash, the National Park Service restored a previously-erased photo of Harriet Tubman from a webpage dedicated to the history of the Underground Railroad, in which she led 13 missions to rescue enslaved people.

A spokesperson said the changes were not authorized by the agency's leadership.

Keep ReadingShow less
screenshot from Fox News of Jackie DeAngelis and Tommy Tuberville
Fox News

Tuberville Now Claims 'Entire Men's Teams' Are 'Turning Trans' To Play Against Women

Alabama Republican Senator Tommy "Coach" Tuberville appeared on Fox News Sunday to again spread unhinged misinformation about transgender athletes.

Speaking with guest host Jackie DeAngelis, Tuberville stated:

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshot from Last Week Tonight With John Oliver
Last Week Tonight With John Oliver/YouTube

John Oliver Epically Calls Out Awkward Truth Behind Former NCAA Swimmer's Anti-Trans Tirades

On Sunday's episode of Last Week Tonight With John Oliver, the outspoken host devoted the entire program to the attack on trans girls and women who play sports by the GOP.

Oliver began the program saying:

Keep ReadingShow less
man in front of computer code
Chris Yang on Unsplash

Conspiracy Theories That Seem Believable The More You Look Into Them

We tend to think of conspiracy theories as a phenomenon of the digital age. But the internet and mobile devices only allow them to be created and spread faster.

Conspiracy theories have likely been around as long as human civilization has. They are, at their root, just another form of rumors and gossip.

Keep ReadingShow less