STRICTLY Come Dancing viewers are convinced they have spotted a brewing feud between the head judge and a particular celeb dancer.
The judge has come under fire again after giving out low scores to a specific celeb.
Strictly fans have taken to X(Twitter) and expressed that they think head judge Shirley Ballas, doesn't like Irish TV presenter Angela Scanlon as she keeps giving her low scores and harsh feedback.
One user said: "Shirley has one woman she hates every year (Emma B, Clara, Maisie, etc), and this year it's clearly Angela S. shame… #strictly."
Another added: "Shirley clearly hates Angela."
A third penned: "Shirley f******g hates Angela."
Read more on Strictly
Where EastEnders' Wicks family are now – hunk’s horror fall to Strictly romance
Inside the OTHER Strictly curse as talented star becomes latest victim
A fourth chimed in: "Shirley HATES Angela. Not a single compliment."
A fifth asserted: "Shirley hates Nigel and Angela S."
Earlier this month, the 63-year-old was also accused and slammed by fans for being 'sexist' and giving the female stars low scores.
However, the hit BBC series also sparked a fix row after fans accused the judges of over-scoring Angela Rippon, 79, in order to keep her on the show.
Most read in TV
SHOCK MOVE
BBC presenter quits show after 18 years to join ITV rival as co-host
DANCE WOE
Amanda Abbington opens up on quitting Strictly & hints she was ‘pushed over edge’
horror assault
MAFS star in hospital after she was ‘randomly attacked’ in women’s toilets
EWE TURN
Cheating Amanda Owen is plotting her TV comeback — alongside jilted hubby Clive
Angela is the oldest contestant to waltz into the ballroom competition, with a legendary TV career that dates back to when she hosted Strictly from 1988 until 1991 and then again in 1998.
The iconic presenter also has a long history with the institution of UK dance, which has made fans think that judges Craig Revel Horwood, Motsi Mabuse, Anton Du Beke and Shirley are intentionally showing her favouritism and leniency regarding her scoring.
Source: Read Full Article