Twirl Trouble: Kenya Moore Comes for a Blogger While Her Hair Spa Sits Empty—Sis, It’s Time for a Break
Twirl Trouble: Kenya Moore Comes for a Blogger While Her Hair Spa Sits Empty—Sis, It’s Time for a Break
Kenya Moore is no stranger to drama. From twirling on Real Housewives of Atlanta to twirling into lawsuits, shade matches, and salon dreams—she stays in the headlines. But her latest moment? Not from the show, but from the streets of social media, where she’s clapping back at a Black blogger and claiming they're trying to destroy her business and career.
Yes, Ms. Moore took to the internet—possibly from her phone inside that nearly empty hair spa—to throw some serious accusations. According to her, this particular blogger is spreading lies, misrepresenting facts, and sabotaging her livelihood. But here’s where it gets messy: the blogger’s now-viral article (with over 2,000 words of receipts and raw observations) laid out some things Kenya didn’t want to hear.
Let’s Talk About the Salon (Or Lack Thereof)
According to multiple sources and that now-infamous exposé, the Kenya Moore Hair Spa isn’t exactly giving what it was supposed to give. The article claims:
- The spa is rarely open.
- If it is open, it's run by one person—often not even a stylist.
- There are no clients visibly entering or leaving.
- Drawers are allegedly empty, and basic salon equipment is either missing or pushed aside like unused props.
And people who tried to book? They either never heard back, were ghosted after a consultation, or showed up to... nothing. A few even said it looked like a pop-up shop with good lighting and no soul.
Kenya’s Response: Deflect, Deny, Drag
Rather than addressing the claims, Kenya reportedly fired back with accusations of harassment, jealousy, and career sabotage. She went into full defense mode. But as many pointed out online: “How are you mad at someone for writing the truth? Where’s the lie?”
Instead of presenting receipts, updates, or even pictures of actual clients, Kenya dragged the blogger’s credibility while avoiding the actual elephant—or rather, empty chair—in the room.
The Bigger Issue: Ego vs. Execution
Here’s the real tea: You can’t demand success off your name alone. Kenya has the fame, the brand, and the face—but where’s the follow-through? Opening a business means long hours, real leadership, consistent service, and making sure people actually leave with laid edges and good Yelp reviews.
You can’t twirl past accountability.
If your salon’s struggling, fix it. Don’t fight bloggers—fight to save your reputation with action. Not Instagram comments.
Advice to Kenya (From Someone Who's Watched Since Season 5)
Kenya, sis. Take a deep breath. Maybe even a break.
You are spiraling in public when you could be rebuilding in private. It’s giving “crisis mode” when it should be giving “CEO comeback.”
Here’s some free advice from the blogosphere:
- Close for a month. Reassess. Renovate. Hire a full team.
- Stop arguing online. Book clients, not battles.
- Reintroduce the spa. Show us transformation. Show us results.
- Apologize if needed. We love a woman who can be vulnerable and strong.
- Remember who you are. You’re Kenya Moore. You don’t need to clap back—you need to level up.
Because right now, it looks like the only thing twirling is your business out the door.
Final Thought:
It’s not about a blogger trying to tear you down—it’s about making sure there’s something real for people to support. You can’t cry sabotage if the salon was already sinking.
So Kenya, for the love of bundles and bad behavior—get it together.
#KenyaMooreHairSpa #RealityCheck #BloggersTea #CEOOrNah #TwirlAndTryAgain
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