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Reporter mocks Billie Eilish at home after Grammy ICE comments
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A British reporter tried to confront Billie Eilish at her Los Angeles dwelling on Tuesday, mockingly asking to be let in after the singer’s viral anti-ICE feedback at Sunday’s Grammy Awards.
Throughout her acceptance speech, Eilish instructed the viewers “nobody is illegitimate on stolen land” and ended her remarks with “f— ICE.” The feedback sparked a direct backlash, prompting GB Information reporter Ben Leo to go to Eilish’s multi-million greenback horse farm on Monday to see if she “practices what she preaches”.
“Billie thinks there is not any such factor as an unlawful individual as a result of we’re all on stolen land,” Leo mentioned in his broadcast for the British information channel. “So we’re right here in Billie’s moderately posh neighborhood in Los Angeles. Let’s examine if she practices what she preaches.
“Hopefully, if she sticks to her deserves, she will not have an issue with me coming in, perhaps making a cup of espresso or tea.”

Billie Eilish confronted backlash for her viral anti-ICE feedback towards immigration enforcement on the Grammy Awards. (Getty Photographs)
Celebs denounce ice brokers, Trump administration as ‘monster’ and ‘worst of the worst’ in scathing critique
As he walked as much as the property, which is shielded by tall hedges, safety cameras and a fence, Leo famous how “ironic” it was that the singer’s dwelling was protected by a “large wall” given her stance on the nation’s borders.
“Allow us to in, Billie, please. We’re right here as a result of that is stolen land, Billie, and we predict we must always have entry to your stunning $3 million mansion,” Leo mentioned into the home’s cellphone sales space. Nobody appeared to reply to the request.
Leo concluded the report by claiming that Eilish has “completely different concepts” about her personal property than she does in regards to the land.
Eilish additionally confronted criticism from the Tongva tribe, a Native American individuals who mentioned the singer’s house is on his “ancestral land.”

Chief Anthony Purple Blood Morales, left; Mona Morales Recalde, proper; and members of the Gabrieleno/Tongva San Gabriel Band of Mission Indians carry out through the 2026 Grammy Awards pre-show on the Peacock Theater in Los Angeles on Sunday, February 1, 2026. (Myung J. Chun/Los Angeles Occasions by way of Getty Photographs)
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“We recognize the chance to supply readability on Billie Eilish’s latest feedback,” de Tongva beforehand instructed Fox Information Digital.
“Because the First Folks of the better Los Angeles basin, we perceive that her house is on our ancestral lands. Eilish has not contacted our tribe straight about her properties. We recognize the occasion of public figures giving visibility to the true historical past of this nation.”
Eilish was one among a number of celebrities, together with upcoming Tremendous Bowl halftime headliner Dangerous Bunny, who used the Grammy Awards to bash ICE officers and the Trump administration’s immigration insurance policies.
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Representatives for Eilish didn’t instantly return Fox Information Digital’s request for remark.
Fox Information’ Lindsay Kornick contributed to this report.
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