A single photo lit a match under the internet. Scott Disick smiled for the camera; his young
daughter pulled a face that millions instantly recognized as something far darker.
Within hours, words like “racist,” “ignorant,” and “bad parenting” were everywhere.
Some blamed Scott. Some blamed Kourtney. Others blamed soci… Continues…
What should have been a harmless father–daughter snapshot turned into a public reckoning about race, parenting, and the power of images.
In the photo, Penelope tugs at her eyelids while they sit at an Asian restaurant, chopsticks on the table, Scott grinning beside her.
For many East Asian viewers, it wasn’t “just a silly face” but a painful reminder of the “slant-eye” mockery that has followed them for generations.
The backlash split Scott and Kourtney’s followers. Some accused them of raising “ignorant” children in unimaginable wealth,
demanding they use their privilege to teach cultural sensitivity. Others rushed to defend Penelope
as an innocent child copying a goofy expression she barely understands.
Yet beneath the noise lies a quieter truth: intent doesn’t erase impact. One careless post exposed how
easily old stereotypes resurface—and how urgently parents, famous or not, must confront them.