Suzy El Ordoneya didn’t force herself onto anyone’s screens. She didn’t beg for attention or demand special treatment. She’s a 19-year-old girl who’s proud of where she comes from, doesn’t hide her accent, and doesn’t pretend to be from a different class just to get accepted. That’s what people can’t handle.
The problem isn’t that she exists.
The problem is that she exists loudly and confidently, and that she’s gaining more attention than the people who believe they deserve it more. She doesn’t try to impress the media. She doesn’t tone herself down to make others comfortable.
And for that, they’re furious.
The hate she’s getting isn’t about her content. It’s about people being uncomfortable with the idea that someone they see as “beneath them” is doing better than them. That’s what this is really about.
Blaming a Teenager for an Industry Problem
After Suzy appeared at the El-Shater premiere and trended more than the film’s stars, actor Hussein Haggag had something to say.

He complained that actors like him work for years, study, and barely make a few thousand pounds, while “irrelevant influencers” like Suzy are the ones getting attention.
But Suzy didn’t organize the premiere. She didn’t choose who got invited. She didn’t ask to trend. She showed up, like she was asked to.
That’s it.
If Haggag is angry at the way the industry works, maybe he should say that. Maybe he should ask producers why engagement is worth more than experience now.
But instead, he chose to throw all that bitterness on a 19-year-old girl who had absolutely nothing to do with his paycheck. A 19-year-old who was not even born when you were getting paid the 3k you’re complaining about.
She wasn’t even born when he started acting. Whatever he’s going through is not her fault.
You Invited Her, Then Mocked Her for Charging a Fee
TV host Yasmine El Khatib invited Suzy to her show, then turned around and dragged her publicly for asking for 100,000 EGP. She questioned what Suzy could possibly say that’s worth that amount.
Here’s a better question: If you think she has nothing to say, why did you want her on your show? Are you really just inviting people without even knowing what they’re going to talk about?
100K isn’t some wild number. It’s a regular appearance fee for anyone with an audience. Suzy’s name brings views. Her clips go viral. Her presence boosts engagement. That’s exactly why Yasmine wanted her in the first place. So the mockery afterwards feels like nothing more than an attention grab.
What actually happened was simple. Suzy knew her worth. She named her price. The host didn’t like it and decided to embarrass her instead of just moving on.
Suzy El Ordoneya is Now, officially, Everyone’s Punching Bag
Every time someone wants to make a point about society or the industry or content creators, they drag Suzy into it. She’s constantly blamed for things she didn’t cause, and used as a symbol of everything going wrong, even when she has nothing to do with it.
Actors blame her because they aren’t paid enough. Hosts blame her because their shows are irrelevant. People on social media blame her because she doesn’t speak the way they want her to.
The reality is simple. Suzy is being punished for not being ashamed of who she is. She’s confident, she’s visible, and she doesn’t play by the rules that the industry forces on everyone else. That’s why they hate her.
The Problem Isn’t Her
Suzy didn’t ask for the spotlight. People gave it to her. Brands gave her deals. Audiences gave her engagement. Shows invited her. She just responded to what was offered.
So if anyone’s upset about how far she’s gone or how much she’s earning, maybe direct that frustration at the people in charge. The ones handing out those opportunities. The ones building systems that reward engagement more than experience.
But of course, that’s too risky. So they turn on the easiest target. A 19-year-old girl.
Suzy’s not the problem. She just happens to be the one no one’s afraid to blame.
Anyway, pay the talents and people you make exploit on your TV shows!
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