She’s calling out their cruel intentions.
Reese Witherspoon’s daughter, Ava Phillippe, 24, is slamming keyboard warriors who have made comments about her looks.
Ava – who is one of two children that Witherspoon, 48, had with her ex-husband and “Cruel Intentions” co-star Ryan Phillippe, 49 – posted a viral Tiktok on May 4.
In the video, Witherspoon’s look-alike daughter said, “NBD but I just achieved a major milestone as a woman online.”
While putting on red lipstick and blasting Wonder Band’s cover of No Dobut’s “Just a Girl,” Ava continued, “I saw 2 different strangers commenting on my body,” she continued. “The first said I should get on Oz*mpic because I’m too fat,” she said, referencing the diabetes drug that has become a weight loss trend.
Barbra Streisand recently came under fire for asking Melissa McCarthy if she used it.
Ava added, “The second [person] accused me of starving myself because I’m too thin.”
She explained that her weight “did not change” during the time period between the different comments and that it “wouldn’t be any of their business” if she had gained or lost weight.
The “Legally Blonde” star’s daughter wrote, “It’s such bulls–t. No one deserves to be picked apart for what they look like.”
Witherspoon shares Ava and son Deacon, 20, with Phillippe. The ex couple was married from 1999 to 2007.
In addition to Deacon, Ava also has half-brother Tennessee, 11, who Witherspoon had with her second husband, Jim Toth, whom she divorced last summer after 12 years of marriage.
In her post, Ava added that the public has no idea what a person is going through or “what they struggle with.”
“But no matter who you are … Your beauty exceeds superficial measures,” she wrote.
Ava captioned her video by referring to body-shaming comments as, “simply toxic behavior.”
“Pretty is as pretty does, babes,” she wrote, referring to a quote.
In an April interview with People, she said, “A big saying in the South, especially amongst women is ‘Pretty is as pretty does.”
She added, “Every time that comes up in my brain or I see people being critical of others online for their appearance, I just always think, you’re only as beautiful as you treat other people.”
Ava said that her post was directed toward women because she sees body-shaming happening “disproportionately to young girls & women.”
She added, “But let me be clear; bodyshaming is toxic no matter who the subject is. We all deserve to feel safe & at peace in the vessel we live in.”
The Oscar winner cheered on her daughter in the comments.
“Yes to all of this,” she wrote, with a kiss emoji.