The Chronicle

Tulisa was ‘clearly not ready’ to be judge on X Factor

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TULISA CONTOSTAVL­OS has apologised to X Factor contestant Misha B for publicly accusing her of bullying behaviour while a judge on the show, saying she “clearly wasn’t ready” for the responsibi­lity.

Earlier this month, Misha B claimed she was left traumatise­d and suicidal after her appearance on a live show in 2011, when she was accused by Contostavl­os of being “feisty” and “mean”.

The 31-year-old N-Dubz star, who was 22 at the time, said she had been given “the most powerful platform in the industry”, but had not received any guidance.

Contostavl­os, inset, initially apologised in a four-minute Instagram video, but said it was “ludicrous” to think her comments had been racially motivated.

Sharing a lengthy message on her Instagram account, Contostavl­os said her initial apology had been “more a reaction to online violent/death threats to me & my family & people telling me to kill myself”.

She said: “I fully acknowledg­e the pain I caused & fully accept people should be angry about it. I can state again there was nothing racial in my thought process.

“When I referred to Misha as being feisty & competitiv­e that was a reflection of myself because I saw myself in Misha. We are both very strong women & when I communicat­e with people I always jump to what I have in common to find a basis to connect. I totally understand that it made Misha feel a certain way, as a young black girl hearing it from a young white girl on a huge platform, living in the oppressed society we do, full of racial slurs & undertones, not knowing my thought process.”

She also addressed the events backstage which lead her to accuse Misha B of bullying.

In her previous apology, Contostavl­os claimed Misha B had made two of her acts cry, one on the night of their confrontat­ion. She continued: “On the back stage issue, I addressed it that day on air because when I feel under threat, or someone I care about is under threat, my instant reaction is to fight back. “That day, someone younger than both of us came crying to me in my dressing room, upset over an accusation/judgment about them Misha had expressed & later admitted to me, which I felt was extremely harsh & it was not the first I had heard of this. I ran out there thinking, I’m doing the right thing, I have to call her out, I have to protect, I have to be a protector, attacking it head on is the only way to make it stop.”

She said she had let her emotions “get in the way of work” and she had not stopped to think.

“I didn’t have any guidance & I’d been given the most powerful platform in the industry at the time,” she added. “I had a huge responsibi­lity that I clearly wasn’t ready for in those circumstan­ces.”

 ??  ?? Alexandra Burke is now a Royal Commonweal­th Society ambassador
Alexandra Burke is now a Royal Commonweal­th Society ambassador
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