-

WWE developmental talent deletes her Twitter after old racial slurs pop up

The “investigative work” of fans on WWE developmental talent spelled bad news for 20 year old WWE developmental talent Nhooph Al-Areebi.

The Canadian of Arab descent deleted her Twitter account after tweets from 2012 were brought up showing several racist slurs and remarks. Her Twitter username was @isntshelovely_4 and the account was deleted 24 hours after a story on Reddit’s SquaredCircle community pointed out to several tweets. Her Instagram account with the username isntshelovely416 is still active.

Al-Areebi was signed to a WWE deal in April as part of a new class of International athletes and made her NXT debut as part of Tyler Breeze’s entrance at the NXT Takeover: Unstoppable event.

Another WWE developmental talent, Zahra Schreiber, was fired after posts from her Instagram account of a couple of years back featured the Nazi symbol of the swastika and wrote that it’s “no big deal.” Schreiber has since apologized although it was a bit too late.


Discover more from Wrestling-Online.com

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Colin Vassallo
Colin Vassallohttps://www.wrestling-online.com
Colin Vassallo has been editor of Wrestling-Online since 1996. He is born and raised in Malta, follows professional wrestling and MMA, loves to travel, and is a big Apple fan!

Stories you might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you

LATEST NEWS

Goldberg starts in-ring training for his WWE retirement match

In a post on his social media, WWE Hall of Famer Bill Goldberg revealed that he has started his...

John Cena with new skin care campaign, reveals past skin cancer diagnosis

WWE Superstar John Cena has teamed up with Neutrogena to be the face of their new "Sunscreen You Can't...

WWE Superstars to take over Clash of Clans video game heading into WrestleMania 41

WWE and Supercell’s popular mobile game Clash of Clans, which has amassed more than two billion lifetime downloads, today...

Discover more from Wrestling-Online.com

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading