Jonah Hill is being mocked widely on the internet after his ex-girlfriend shared texts and alleged he was 'emotionally abusive'

Jonah Hill speaking into a microphone while wearing a black, blue, and white patterned jumper and a pair of glasses.
Social-media users have made numerous memes mocking Jonah Hill.Matthias Nareyek/Getty Images
  • Jonah Hill's ex-partner accused him of being "emotionally abusive" and shared a series of texts.

  • The messages appeared to show a list of "boundaries" that said to avoid posting bathing-suit photos.

  • The messages are so baffling and alarming that internet users have been turning them into memes.

The internet is mocking Jonah Hill after his ex-girlfriend Sarah Brady accused him of being emotionally abusive and shared what she said were screenshots of his text messages. Social-media users have even begun creating sketches demonstrating how ridiculous his alleged demands were.

On Friday, Brady, a semiprofessional surfer, posted several screenshots to her Instagram story of texts that she said Hill sent to her while they were in a relationship in 2021. In one of the images, Hill appeared to have sent a list of his "boundaries" that prohibited her from "surfing with men," having "boundaryless inappropriate friendships with men," "pictures of yourself in a bathing suit," and forming "friendships with women who are in unstable places."

Hill was alleged to have written in the text that he would not be "the right partner" if she violated these terms.

Brady wrote in a separate Instagram story that she was posting these messages as a warning to other young women who find themselves in similar situations.

"Someone being an emotionally abusive partner doesn't mean they're a terrible person (often stems from their own trauma) and at the same time, it doesn't mean it's ok," she wrote in a separate story post.

In the aftermath of the incident, the internet is ablaze with shock, disses, and memes accusing Hill of exploiting therapy speak to police Brady's personal and lifestyle choices.

"Jonah Hill explaining 'boundaries' to guys who've never been to therapy," a Twitter user wrote, attaching a photo of the fictional Joker character next to a clown.

"If ur bf says not to post that bikini pic ask him if that's the jonah hill he wants to die on," a tweet with more than 75,000 likes said.

One user shared a screenshot from the movie "Little Women" of three of the protagonist sisters wearing fully buttoned-up dresses with their hair tied back, adding: "Jonah Hill's future girlfriend heading to the beach with her friends."

Another Twitter user hilariously urged people to "be the kind of person Jonah Hill wouldn't let his girlfriend hang out with."

Some users made memes to gesture at how ridiculous it would be to tell a surfer not to share pictures of herself surfing with men or in a bathing suit. One person compared it with a woman telling her chef boyfriend that he couldn't cook with female chefs or post social-media photos in his chef's coat.

In a popular TikTok from the Indianapolis Colts tight end Kylen Granson, the woman filming is heard jokingly harassing his outfit choices as he leaves the house to go on a run. "You don't see a problem with the outfit?" she asks Granson relentlessly as he looks down at his T-shirt and football shorts.

"How Jonah Hill looks to every pro athlete rn," the on-screen text read.

Commenters said these memes had become a bright spot in an otherwise alarming accusation against the actor.

"This is the only thing I will thank Jonah Hill for. How the turntables turn," a top comment read.

While some posts are made to make light of the situation, sociologists and therapists are also using social media to remind people that these texts, if they are real, exhibit controlling behavior. The therapist Jeff Guenther said in a TikTok on Sunday that Hill's texts were a "misuse of therapy language."

Read the original article on Insider