Gary Hershorn via Getty Images "Inside Edition" ran a segment over the weekend in which a reporter asked people why they'd jumped over turnstiles to ride the New York City subway instead of swiping their MetroCard.

New York City faces a bevy of social problems: the housing crisis. Accessibility. Racism.

In a weekend segment, “Inside Edition” chose to highlight one issue that doesn’t typically make it onto residents’ lists of top complaints: so-called “fare beaters.” The term refers to people, often poor people or teens, who jump over subway turnstiles instead of paying $2.75 for a ride.

The segment featured reporter Lisa Guerrero interviewing ― or harassing, depending on your outlook ― various New Yorkers who apparently did not swipe their MetroCards.

Many Twitter users were less than impressed with her work. Some pointed to an August 2017 report indicating the MTA, which oversees the city’s subway system, had sat on a whopping $80 million from unused MetroCards. Others simply asked why the long-running CBS program thought it was necessary to vilify people who could not pay the fare ― instead of turning a critical eye on systemic problems that spur inequity.

“Do Wall Street now,” said one person.