Letitia Wright deletes social media after criticism over anti-vaccination video
Black Panther actress Letitia Wright appears to have deleted her social media accounts after she was criticised for sharing a video questioning the safety of the Covid-19 vaccine.
The British star, 27, sparked controversy after tweeting a video called Covid-19 Vaccine: Should We Take It? from On The Table, a YouTube discussion channel.
Wright faced a fierce backlash from fans on social media as well as her Marvel co-star Don Cheadle, who described the video as âhot garbageâ.
The video appears to have since been removed from YouTube, while Wrightâs Twitter handle now shows the message âThis account doesnât exist,â and her Instagram says: âSorry, this page isnât available.â
Addressing the criticism in a post on Twitter before the account was removed, she wrote: âMy intention was not to hurt anyone, my only intention of posting the video was it raised my concerns with what the vaccine contains and what we are putting in our bodies. Nothing else.â
In an earlier post, Wright appeared to claim she was being âcancelledâ for asking questions of the vaccine.
The video in question saw presenter Tomi Arayomi speak at length about his personal feelings about the efficacy and safety of vaccines.
He said: âI am just a big sceptic of needles and vaccinations in general, I think the body should be able to produce the right antibodies to fight things.â
He added: âWe can just get that (the vaccine) out there and hope it doesnât make extra limbs grow, hope to god you donât develop children that have 11 fingers and 12 toes, we are hoping for the best.
âWe have seen vaccines do damage before.â
The description of the video said âTonight Iâm talking about Luciferase, the ingredient allegedly being added to the Covid vaccine to detect those who have not taken it.
âLuciferase, named by its founder after Lucifer???
âNow this is only partially true on a fact check, but we explore this and more On The Table.â
Arayomi was described as âan internationally received and recognised prophet, speaker, author and founder of RIG Nation, a media platform with the Christian mission established since 2007 to train people to become prophets and prophets to be peopleâ.
Wright, who most recently starred in Steve McQueenâs Small Axe film Mangrove, received a barrage of criticism for sharing the video alongside a prayer hands emoji.
When one fan warned her âthey are going to make an example out of youâ, she replied: âMake an example out of me for asking if something is right for my body before taking it. Interesting world we live in.â
When another follower told her she was upsetting people, she wrote: âNot my intention to make anyone upset. Nor am I saying donât take it. Iâm just concerned about whatâs in it thatâs all. Isnât that fair to question or ask?â
After replying to a string of followers criticising her post, she wrote: âIf you donât conform to popular opinions. But ask questions and think for yourselfâŠ.you get cancelled.â
Marvel fans shared Wrightâs post with her co-star Cheadle, who plays James Rhodes/War Machine in the film series.
He wrote: âJesus⊠just scrolled through. Hot garbage.
âEvery time I stopped and listened, he and everything he said sounded crazy and f***** up. i would never defend anybody posting this. But I still wonât throw her away over it. The rest Iâll take off Twitter. Had no idea.â

