Kristin Cavallari fires employee after 'insensitive' 9/11 Instagram post: Report

After receiving backlash for an "insensitive" Instagram post while in New York City on Sept. 11, reality TV star and businesswoman Kristin Cavallari has reportedly fired one of her employees.

"NYC for 24hrs. And what a time to be here..always remember," Cavallari's post initially read on Wednesday, the 18th anniversary of the terrorist attacks on the nation, including NYC.

Throngs of people bashed Cavallari ("The Hills") after the photo showing her smiling and wearing a low-cut black dress was posted online Wednesday.

People Magazine reported that Cavallari "feels bad about the situation" and fired an employee for posting the "insensitive" 9/11 reference.

The "employee took it upon herself to post it Wednesday with her own caption,” People reported.

A spokesperson for Cavallari could not immediately be reached for comment.

Kristin Cavallari's initial post
Kristin Cavallari's initial post

Less than 40 minutes after the photograph posted it had garnered hundreds of negative responses. It also had more than 57,000 likes, including one from Victoria's Secret supermodel Lily Aldridge.

"Poor taste," one Instagram user responded on Wednesday.

"Wrong picture for the sentiment in the post," another one of her followers wrote.

"Big fan of both you and your product, even visited your store when I was in Nashville this past year. But wrong photo with your message," another followers posted. "A low cut black dress with a smile shouldn’t be your look for today. Maybe throw on jeans and a t shirt and go visit one of those fire stations. Pay your respects.."

Another post reads, "You’re gorgeous, but maybe this picture is not the right one for today. All those people that lost their loved ones don’t care how hot you look, today."

Cavallari soon changed the caption to simply, "NYC for 24hrs."

Cavallari owns jewelry business Uncommon James in Nashville, and lives in the city with her former-NFL quarterback husband, Jay Cutler.

Bells tolled across New York City and moments of silence were being observed across the nation Wednesday as America remembered the Sept. 11 terror attacks.

A moment of silence was observed at 8:46 a.m. EDT to mark the time the first plane hit – American Airlines Flight 11, flying from Boston to Los Angeles, had been hijacked before slamming into the north face of the North Tower.

In New York, the names of the almost 3,000 victims were being solemnly read at the National September 11 Memorial & Museum. Intermittent moments of silence marked the impact times for the second Ground Zero plane, the moments when each tower collapsed, and the impact times for the planes that struck the Pentagon and a field in Shanksville, Pennsylvania.

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This article originally appeared on Nashville Tennessean: Kristin Cavallari fires employee after 'insensitive' 9/11 post: Report