On Sunday night, Meryl Streep took aim at President-elect Donald Trump in her Golden Globes acceptance speech. In making a point about the importance of diversity in artistic expression, Streep took a small dig at football and MMA fighting, which didn’t sit well with everyone.

“Hollywood is crawling with outsiders and foreigners,” Streep said. “If we kick them all out, you’ll have nothing to watch but football and mixed martial arts, which are not the arts.”

Earlier Monday, Bellator MMA president Scott Coker respectfully invited Streep to watch a fight in person.

UFC president Dana White on the other hand, went on a sexist and ageist rant against the award-winning actress, calling her an “uppity, 80-year-old lady.”

“It’s not going to be everybody’s thing,” White told TMZ. “And the last thing in the world I expect is an uppity, 80-year old lady to be in our demographic and love mixed martial arts.”

Streep, by the way, is 67, and White sounds like a man who has never sobbed his way through Sophie’s Choice.

White, who endorsed Trump at the RNC, also disagreed with her characterization that MMA wasn’t artistic.

“Of course it’s an art. I mean, these fighters, the men and women, are so talented. They train their whole lives to become the best in the world. And the people who get into the UFC are the elite of the elite. To say something stupid like that is like saying she’s not a talented actress, which she is. She’s a very talented actress.”

If you want to get into semantics, Streep’s not saying that MMA fighting isn’t artistic. Saying something isn’t “the arts” doesn’t reduce its value. The line is a contrast against the more refined and classical world of theater against the brutish and physical spectacle of sports. Streep does make a misstep on dismissing the diversity of sports, but take a second to parse out the difference before we resort to name calling.

Streep’s speech last night also raised about $80,000 in donations for The Committee to Protect Journalists.

So, in conclusion, Meryl Streep spends her time delivering thoughtful, impassioned words on civic responsibility and personal freedom, while Dana White spends his days arguing with people on Twitter.