Save 50% on a 3-month Digiday+ membership. Ends Dec 5.
Billboard blasted for its ‘vile’ tweet sexualizing Kim Kardashian’s daughter
Billboard is apologizing after one of its tweets involving Kim Kardashian’s daughter North West was widely interpreted as “vile” and “problematic.”
The magazine’s Twitter account, followed by 3.2 million people, posted a picture this morning of the 2-year-old in Kardashian’s arms licking a toy with the caption: “The apple doesn’t fall from the tree” with a link to a video of West shooing away the paparazzi. The tweet, seen in this screenshot below, was deleted after two hours after publication:

Many people blasted the tweet for its implied sexual innuendo, including MSNBC contributor Janet Mock who called it “appalling” and “shameful,” adding “an editor should never position such innuendo on the image of a child, regardless of her famous parent.”
That response was echoed through many on Twitter:
Slut-shaming women isn’t okay. Slut-shaming baby girls is really not okay. I don’t care who their mothers are. https://t.co/aFk2RqNkiR
— Jamil Smith (@JamilSmith) October 30, 2015
This is vile, absolutely vile. https://t.co/qHia5ougoK — Gugulethu Mhlungu (@GugsM) October 30, 2015
Delete this @billboard. This is absolutely disgusting. Garbage. https://t.co/8lBmqX7Tw4
— Jason Rosenberg (@mynameisjro) October 30, 2015
Ad position: web_incontent_pos1
.@billboard‘s tweet about north west is the most disgusting thing. someone needs to get fired. — carla (@indiosyncratic) October 30, 2015
Y’all trash for this RT @billboard: The apple doesn’t fall far from the tree… https://t.co/ngkPaDewWn https://t.co/kWWhgRLHch
— Brey Z (@TheBreyKeys) October 30, 2015
@billboard she’s a child she’s a child she’s a child she’s a child she’s a child she’s a child she’s a child she’s a child she’s a child — Zola (@SharnTM) October 30, 2015
Why not use an actual photo from the story that you’re posting about @billboard? Extremely problematic.
— Air-IN with an E (@AirInDanYell) October 30, 2015
A Billboard press rep pointed us to this apology on Twitter without elaborating further:
We apologize for the tweet involving North West. The caption was about her comments to paparazzi. The suggestion some see was not intended. — billboard (@billboard) October 30, 2015
Ad position: web_incontent_pos2
Still, many aren’t buying Billboard’s message even attacking the magazine’s editorial drift away from music news:
@billboard y’all are lying! If that was the case, you wouldn’t have used that picture. Yall are disgusting & thought it would’ve been funny!
— Lia✨ (@king_leeee) October 30, 2015
@billboard well maybe if you stick to MUSIC related posts only, you wouldn’t have had that issue — Moriah Grant (@RiRi_Lova00) October 30, 2015
@billboard pls, y’all been doing dumb shit for 2 years , stay trying to get a few clicks
— Gianni Carter (@MrBeyonceFan) October 30, 2015
Photos via Facebook and Twitter.
More in Media
Digiday+ Research Subscription Index 2025: Subscription strategies from Bloomberg, The New York Times, Vox and others
Digiday’s third annual Subscription Index examines and measures publishers’ subscription strategies to identify common approaches and key tactics among Bloomberg, The New York Times, Vox and others.
From lawsuits to lobbying: How publishers are fighting AI
We may be closing out 2025, but publishers aren’t retreating from the battle of AI search — some are escalating it, and they expect the fight to stretch deep into 2026.
Media Briefing: Publishers turn to vertical video to compete with creators and grow ad revenue in 2026
Publishers add vertical video feeds to their sites to boost engagement, attract video ad spend and compete with news creators.
Ad position: web_bfu