Outraged Instagram users branded Ramona Singer “tone-deaf” for bragging about her vacation views in Florida while the catastrophic Los Angeles wildfires rage on.
The “Real Housewives of New York City” alum took to her Instagram Story Friday to tell her followers in a selfie-style video, “What a beautiful morning in Florida! What a way to wake up! Look at this view. Mmm, so happy.”
She then flipped her camera to show her view from her oceanfront balcony.
“Bright and sunny! Gonna do some work, play some tennis. Beautiful day,” Singer said.
Atop the clip, she wrote, “A beautiful day to wake up to…unfortunately people in Cali have no idea what their day will bring.”
Instagram account the Talk of Shame was among the many that reposted the video, penning alongside the footage, “Wow Ramona. Wow. Tone Deaf much?”
Someone else remarked beneath Bravo by Betches’ screen-recording of the clip, “No one does tone deaf like her,” while another argued, “She isn’t tone deaf. This is who she is as a person. Very egocentric 🥴.”
A third even quipped, “The day Ramona isn’t tone deaf will be breaking news.”
The majority of commenters were not surprised by the 68-year-old former Bravolebrity’s behavior, as she’s managed to stick her foot in her mouth countless times before.
Some of the messages read, “Disgusting but what else is new,” “It’s always the people you most expect,” “Reminds me of Covid Ramona,” “Ramona will NEVER miss an opportunity to do the wrong thing,” “Someone needed to take away her internet access years ago” and “It’s just classic Ramona — this woman is insufferable.”
One critic, however, was in disbelief. “Is that her actual caption about the people in California?” they asked. “How one can be so out of touch is so disturbing!!”
A few even wondered, “Does she not have a publicist? This is worse than her usual.” (She does, and Page Six has reached out for comment.)
Late Tuesday morning, a gigantic blaze broke out in Pacific Palisades, Calif. Not only is it still burning, but several other massive fires have since ignited across Los Angeles County.
The fires have wiped out entire neighborhoods and communities, leaving hundreds of thousands of residents and animals displaced.
Many have lost everything they own and frequent: their homes, cars, businesses, schools and churches.
As of Friday afternoon, 10 deaths had been reported.