“SIT DOWN, BARBIE!”: Jasmine Paolini humiliates Greta Thunberg live on TV with 10 perfect words

Rome, 13 January 2026– A simple post-workout interview turned into one of the most viral moments of the 2026 tennis season yesterday.
Jasmine Paolini, the 30-year-old Tuscan number 7 in the world, was a guest on the morning program “Buongiorno Sport” on Rai Sport, to talk about her preparation for the Australian Open.
No one could have imagined that that quiet chat would become the scene of an epic clash with Greta Thunberg, the Swedish climate activist.
The episode occurred live, at 10.42am, during a satellite connection from Melbourne, where Paolini is training.
The host Stefano Meloccaro had just asked the Italian tennis player what her goals were for 2026, after the historic 2025 closed with the final at Wimbledon and the doubles title at Roland Garros together with Sara Errani.
Paolini replied smiling, with his typical Tuscan accent: “I want to have fun, give everything on the pitch and maybe bring home another Slam”.
At that point, without warning, the Rome studio opened a connection with Greta Thunberg, invited as a “special guest” to promote the “Sport for Future” campaign, an initiative that combines LGBTQ+ awareness and the fight against climate change.
The campaign, launched in November 2025 by several international organizations, involved the participation of high-level athletes who, during the 2026 tournaments, would wear a rainbow bracelet with the Earth logo.
Paolini had been contacted months earlier to co-promote the initiative, but had kindly declined, explaining that she wanted to maintain the exclusive focus on tennis and that she did not feel comfortable taking public positions on political issues.
Greta Thunberg, connected from Stockholm, wasted no time. With the decisive tone that made her famous, Paolini interrupted: “Jasmine, I’m sorry to interrupt, but I cannot remain silent. You were one of the ambassadors of this campaign. You refused to wear the bracelet and speak publicly.
This is a betrayal of future generations and the LGBTQ+ community. You are a traitor!”.
The studio is silent. The host stammered, “Greta, maybe we can…”, but the Swedish activist continued: “Athletes like you have a huge platform. Refusing to use it for the climate and for rights is pure selfishness.
How can you sleep at night knowing that the planet is burning and that millions of people suffer discrimination?”.
Paolini, visibly surprised but composed, stared at the camera for a few seconds. His face, usually smiling, became serious. Then, with a calm, cold and sharp voice like a straight line, he pronounced the fateful ten words that went around the world: **“Sit down, Barbie.
I hit balls, you save the planet”**.
The silence lasted exactly three seconds. Then the studio exploded. The audience present – around fifty people including journalists, technicians and invited fans – burst into thunderous, unanimous applause, which lasted over twenty seconds.
Greta Thunberg remained speechless, her face flushed, and visibly sank into her seat, without replying. The embarrassed host hastily closed the connection with Sweden, thanking “both for their contribution”.
The video of the episode, uploaded to the Rai Sport YouTube channel, reached 8 million views in less than 24 hours. On TikTok the hashtag #SieditiBarbie is already in first place in Italy, with over 450,000 videos.
On X (formerly Twitter), the clip was retweeted by people like Matteo Berrettini (“Great Jas!”), John McEnroe (“That’s how you shut down nonsense!”) and even by some Italian LGBTQ+ celebrities who appreciated the frankness without hatred.
But let’s go in order: why did Greta define Paolini as a “traitor”? The “Sport for Future” campaign was born with good intentions. Athletes such as Carlos Alcaraz, Iga Świątek and Coco Gauff joined immediately, wearing the bracelet during training.

Paolini, contacted in September 2025, responded with a polite email: “Thank you for the invitation, but I prefer to focus only on tennis. I wish the campaign the best.” No public rejection, no controversy. Until yesterday.
Sources close to the Tuscan tennis player explain that Jasmine has nothing against the LGBTQ+ community nor against the fight against the climate.
“Jas is an open person, he has friends all over the world and respects everyone – says his coach Renzo Furlan – He simply doesn’t want to turn every interview into a political debate. He wants to play tennis, win tournaments, make the Italian fans smile. Period”.
Greta Thunberg, for her part, published a post on Instagram a few hours after the accident: “Today I reminded a privileged athlete of her responsibilities. I don’t regret it. Silence is complicity.”
The post received over 200,000 likes, but also thousands of critical comments: “Leave those who play sports alone”, “Are you the one interrupting the live broadcasts”, “Barbie? Brilliant!”.
The episode reopened the debate on the role of athletes in social causes. On the one hand, there are those who argue that public figures like Paolini have a duty to expose themselves. On the other, those who defend the right to remain neutral, as Michael Jordan did with the famous “Republicans buy shoes too”.
In Italy, the reaction was overwhelming in favor of Paolini: a flash survey on Sky Sport TG24 shows 84% of viewers on the tennis player’s side.
Jasmine, reached by phone by our newspaper while she was training at Melbourne Park, remained faithful to her style: “I didn’t want to offend anyone. Greta does an important job, I do mine. I responded instinctively, in Italian, because I was at home. If anyone felt hurt, I’m sorry.
Now I’m thinking about Rybakina and the Australian Open.” And about the nickname “Barbie”? He laughs: “Barbie plays tennis in the film, right? Then it’s fine!”.
The confrontation also had practical consequences. The WTA has confirmed that it will not force any player to participate in external campaigns. Meanwhile, sales of Paolini’s merchandising have skyrocketed: the “I hit balls” t-shirt is already sold-out on his official website.
This episode will remain in the history of Italian sport.
Not only for the ten perfect words, pronounced with the Tuscan accent and the calm of someone who knows they are right, but because it reminded everyone of a simple lesson: media and political pressure must not steal the show from those who, with humility and talent, represent Italy in the world.
Jasmine Paolini didn’t scream, she didn’t insult. He only told the truth. And the audience, with that unanimous applause, said thank you.
In an era of endless controversies, Tuscany has shown that sometimes just a few words – said at the right time – are enough to win the most important point. Chapeau, Jas. And now, on to Melbourne: Italy is with you.