Member LoginMember Login - User registration - Setup as front page - Add to favorites - Sitemap Travis Kelce hilariously ripped for his old tweets at New Heights live !

Travis Kelce hilariously ripped for his old tweets at New Heights live

Time:2024-05-22 10:27:10 source:Global Guide news portal

Travis Kelce was hilariously ripped during he and older brother Jason Kelce's New Heights live show on Thursday night in Ohio during a spelling bee, asking contestants to guess words Travis misspelled himself on social media. 

As part of the extravaganza's 'The Great Lombaby Games', pitting an athletic team against an academic team, a Cincinnati student-athlete had to spell squirrel, correctly, to win that round for his team. 

Up stepped Jizzle James, son of former NFL running back Edgerrin James, who spelled the word correctly to give the athletic team the win. 


After James spelled the word squirrel correctly, Jason Kelce hopped off the stage and gave him a hug. 

'I just gave a squirle a piece of bread and it straight smashed all of it!!!! I had no idea they ate bread like that!! Haha #crazy,' Kelce's original tweet from 2011 said. 

James spelled the word squirrel correctly as part of the athletic team on Thursday night

James spelled the word squirrel correctly as part of the athletic team on Thursday night 

Kelce has admitted to using Twitter like a diary long before he became uber-famous in the NFL

Kelce has admitted to using Twitter like a diary long before he became uber-famous in the NFL

He spoke most about his now infamous tweet where he was amazed by a squirrel eating bread

He spoke most about his now infamous tweet where he was amazed by a squirrel eating bread

Several of Kelce's old tweets surfaced last November, with the now boyfriend of Taylor Swift, also posting about his enjoyment of naps and his favorite snacks. 

Once the social-media posts surfaced, Jason had some material for a November taped episode of 'New Heights'. 

'Maybe the biggest news of the past week is the Travis Kelce tweets circa 2009-2011. It has been all over the news,' Jason said. 'When you go back and read them, what does Travis Kelce think?'

Travis replied: 'I'm just using Twitter as like a diary. There's no... I'm just out here saying nonsense. "I just gave a squirrel a piece of bread" and spelt "squirrel" like a jacka**'. 

'I think the only reason this one gets crushed is because of the spelling. But I'd be pretty... if I'm throwing bread around and a squirrel is eating it, I'd be pretty pumped up,' Travis added. 

The now-34-year-old Kelce mentioned during that episode of 'New Heights' that messages like his squirrel-spelling fiasco is why he does not tweet anymore. 

'Nobody followed me back then. But I will say, I have been trying to get those old tweets deleted since I've gotten to the league. But sure enough, it came to surface level,' Travis continued. 

Related information
  • Kansas takes control in the ninth and beats Kansas State in the opener of the Big 12 Tournament
  • Row breaks out over sex education ban for under
  • Shaquille O'Neal, 7ft1in, towers over Sarah Jessica Parker, 5ft3in, as the pair pose up at the star
  • Topeka was at the center of Brown v. Board. Decades later, segregation of another sort lingers
  • Fake elector case: Former Arizona GOP chair Kelli Ward and others set to be arraigned
  • Angel Reese's WNBA debut ends in defeat
  • The Biden administration is planning more changes to quicken asylum processing for new migrants
  • Violence rages in New Caledonia as France rushes emergency reinforcements to its Pacific territory
Recommended content
  • 'IF' movie review: John Krasinski’s film hits a box office nerve with $35 million debut
  • Travis Kelce and Patrick Mahomes learn their road to an historic NFL three
  • Man suspected of punching Boardwalk Empire star Steve Buscemi in random NYC attack
  • Maverick Kentucky congressman has avoided fallout at home after antagonizing GOP leaders
  • Rafael Devers sets team record by homering in 6th straight game as Red Sox top Rays 5
  • Topeka was at the center of Brown v. Board. Decades later, segregation of another sort lingers