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Usually, celebrity interviews are well-rehearsed performances. The questions are often repetitive, the answers are usually polite, and everyone sticks to the script. But every now and then, an interviewer asks a question that is so invasive, so clueless, or so downright rude that the celebrity decides to throw the script out the window.
This is the glorious moment of the clapback, a verbal judo-flip that leaves the interviewer utterly speechless. Some of these have even become a make-or-break moment for someone’s carreer and most of them live on in meme-infamy. Let’s reminisce about the moments we had to pick our jaw up off the floor!
More info: Reddit

Also Rihanna’s “what a disappointing question” simple but effective.
For years, Ellen DeGeneres was the queen of daytime TV, known for her friendly, lighthearted interviews. That all came to a screeching halt in 2019 during a now-legendary interview with actress Dakota Johnson. When Ellen tried to playfully call out Johnson for not inviting her to her birthday party, Johnson responded with a calm, devastatingly simple phrase: “That’s not the truth, Ellen.”
That was the answer heard around the world, and that quiet, factual correction was the first major public crack in Ellen’s “Be Kind” facade and is now widely seen as the moment that kicked off the downfall of her empire. It wasn’t a loud, angry takedown people are used to. It was a quiet, firm refusal to play along with a fake narrative, and it was glorious.

It was obvious he was trying to make her look dumb but it backfired.

Also, Rihanna being asked if she was dating Ashton Kutcher and her saying “how disappointing was that question?”.
Also, also, ScaJo being asked about her diet during the avengers nfinity war press tour: “How come you get like the really interesting, like existential questions and I get the like ‘rabbit food questions?”
Also, also, also Jonah Hill’s response to being asked if he was still considered the fat guy even after losing weight: “do you have any other questions… that are smart?”.
A huge number of the most satisfying celebrity clapbacks come from female artists who are simply fed up with being asked sexist questions that their male counterparts never have to deal with. An iconic example is an infamous 2015 radio interview with Ariana Grande where she was having none of it. The DJs asked her to choose between her makeup and her phone. How original…
This question so mind-numbingly vapid she could barely hide her contempt. She shot back, “Is this what you think girls have trouble choosing between?” Ariana is one celeb who has never been afraid of using their platform to call out the subtle (and not-so-subtle) misogyny that still runs rampant in entertainment media, turning a cringeworthy moment into a powerful one.



While we love to imagine these clapbacks are pure, unfiltered moments of spontaneous wit, the truth is that many celebrities are highly trained for these exact situations. According to media training experts like Ruth Sherman, a huge part of a celebrity’s job is learning how to handle difficult, invasive, or off-topic questions.
They are taught how to “bridge” away from a bad question and pivot back to their talking points. So, when a celebrity delivers a perfectly polished, witty, and brand-safe shutdown, it’s often not an accident. It’s less of a street fight and more of a choreographed martial arts move, a pre-planned defense against a predictable onslaught.

“I’m not going to walk home with any men tonight, I’m going to hang out with my friends, and then go home to the cats.” – Taylor
This whole exchange was iconic lol


And then, there’s the opposite of media training: Charlie Sheen. His infamous 2011 interview tour was not a series of clever clapbacks, it was a complete and total derailment of the entire interview format. This was the era of “winning,” “tiger blood,” and “Adonis DNA.”
He wasn’t pushing back against the interviewers as much as he was creating his own bizarre reality right in front of them, leaving them utterly stunned and speechless. These were unforgettable moments where the interviewer was simply trying to hang on for dear life in the middle of a beautiful, chaotic hurricane. The 2026 mind can’t even comprehend this kind of unscripted chaos.

«I’m not going to let you or your client make me feel in any way that this is my fault. Here we are years later, and I’m being blamed for the unfortunate events of his life that are the product of his decisions—not mine»
she devoured.

and tom was immediately like, “no”.
At the end of the day, whether it’s a quiet, factual correction, a righteous pushback against sexism, or a full-blown unhinged monologue, we love these moments because they feel real. In a world of polished, pre-approved PR statements, a celebrity clapback is a glorious crack in the facade.
It’s a satisfying power shift, a moment where the person in the hot seat takes back control and reminds us all that they are not just a product to be promoted, but a human being who has finally had enough. And there’s nothing more entertaining than that.
What’s your favorite celebrity interview moment? Share them in the comments!

Andy Murray interjects: “Male player,”
Reporter: “I beg your pardon?”
Andy Murray: “Male player, right?”
“Yes, first male player, that’s for sure,” the reporter said, laughing at the error while Murray appeared unamused.
Context: Serena and Venus Williams, Madison Keys and Coco Vandeweghe are all US players who have qualified for Grand Slam semi-finals since 2009. Venus had just accomplished this a few days prior to the interview.

Scarlett Johansson responding to… *checks notes*…. *Jerry Penacoli* about “whether or not she wore underwear for Black Widow”

She stayed pretty calm but I was surprised the guy asking the question didn’t burst into flames just from the look on her face.

One I can recall off the top of my head is Ariana Grande being asked what she’d take to a deserted island and the choices were make up items I think, so she retorted something like “is this what you think girls only think about?” Or something of the sort.



Also, ScarJo getting asked about the Black Widow suit.






>*Interviewer: Well, you and Rachel Weisz did have a very private wedding. Why did you decide to get married that way?*
>
>Craig: This question answers itself. You said we had a private wedding and now you want to ask about the wedding. You are barking up the wrong tree. No disrespect, but if you think it through, that’s the reason we’ve said f— all on that subject. Because it was private.
>
>*Interviewer: That ring on your wedding finger, Daniel — what’s that made of? It looks almost like copper.*
>
>Craig: [*Smiling coldly*] Really. You just see a line in the sand and want to step over it.
The “I’m just here so I don’t get fined” was her quoting an actual football guy.
Tom Hardy when the interviewer was trying to get him to say if he was gay or not.
Anne Hathaway calling out Matt lauer for him chiding her about an upskirt pic of her taken without her consent, when she’s there to talk about Les Miz.
The lesson here is to stop asking women sexist questions solely because they’re women.
Hugh Grant just stonewalling this earnest interviewer’s questions at the Oscars. Some say he was rude and she was just doing her job, some say he’s a hero for not playing into the banal interview game anymore. I feel bad for her but to me it’s really funny how he just doesn’t care anymore
Also, Bradley Cooper in this NYT piece. The reporter was put off by him refusing to answer personal questions because he insisted his personal life didn’t relate to his work in A Star Is Born. He comes off a bit rude but similar to Hugh Grant, he just wasn’t willing to play the game, which I find fascinating. It’s a coldness that I don’t think female actors get the luxury of having unless they are asked overtly inappropriate questions.
