Current “Bachelor” Joey Graziadei confused Gypsy Rose Blanchard for Ruth Bader Ginsburg in a mortifying new video.
Graziadei, 28, made the unbelievable mistake while playing a Betches game called “How online Are You?” in which he had to guess the names of famous people and viral memes.
When a picture of Blanchard — who spent eight years in prison for the murder of her mother — flashed on the screen, the reality TV star confidently exclaimed, “I do know who this person is!”
“Is it Ruth?” he asked. “It’s Jinsburg or Ginsburg or something like that. Am I wrong?”
Despite confusing the convicted felon for the trailblazing Supreme Court Justice, Graziadei ultimately proved that he did, in fact, know who Blanchard was — even if he couldn’t remember her name.
“I know that she had something happen where she went to jail because of her mom,” he explained.
The Season 28 lead seemed a bit embarrassed after the production team told him the right answer.
“Ruth Ginsburg? I don’t know what I’m saying,” he said with a laugh.
Blanchard, 32, became a viral sensation after being released on parole in December 2023. She had been convicted of second-degree murder for the death of her mom, Clauddine “Dee Dee” Blanchard, in June 2015 at their Springfield, Mo., home.
Gypsy infamously convinced her then-boyfriend, Nicholas Godejohn, to kill her mother so that she would be free from the years of abuse inflicted by Dee Dee.
Dee Dee, who was 48 when she was brutally stabbed to death, was believed to have had Munchausen syndrome by proxy, which led her to trick Gypsy and doctors into believing the then-teen had several rare illnesses — allegedly even starving, poisoning and injuring her daughter.
Although Gypsy got out of jail three years early, Godejohn, now 34, was sentenced to life in prison for slaughtering Dee Dee.
Now that she has her freedom, Gypsy wants to help those incarcerated by advocating for prison reform — alongside Kim Kardashian.
Ginsburg, for her part, was the second-ever woman appointed to the high court and a staunch advocate for gender equality throughout her decades-long career.
Due to her fiery opinions and defiant spirit, RBG cemented herself as a feminist icon in both the legal field and American culture before her death in September 2020 at the age of 87.