UPDATE: Oct. 25 ― Amy Schumer has issued a statement on Instagram about the controversy. Under a photo of herself posted Monday evening she wrote:

“You know you that bitch when you cause all this conversation. Thanks for the exclusive release Tidal! We had so much fun making this tribute. All love and women inspiring each other.#strongertogether”

Amy Schumer and Goldie Hawn are taking heat for starring in a parody video of Beyoncé’s “Formation.”

The video premiered on Tidal Friday, and featured Schumer, Hawn, Joan Cusack and Wanda Sykes recreating the iconic video from the set of the duo’s upcoming mother-daughter comedy movie. Schumer also tweeted the video, with the caption, “OK ladies watch us get in formation.”

The video, above, was apparently intended as a lighthearted parody, and it has been praised by some outlets for Hawn and Schumer’s “impressive” dance moves. However, there were quite a few black women on Twitter who did not find it funny. Activist and writer Feminista Jones called out Schumer and Hawn for parodying a song ostensibly about blackness and black womanhood, and started the #AmySchumerGottaGoParty. The hashtag soon began trending on Saturday night, with many people joining the party without even knowing about the parody video.

I quit life pic.twitter.com/aCA2fXyuxu — I Will Block Ya Mama (@FeministaJones) October 23, 2016

That video wasn't a parody. Parodies are funny. That video was just more of her showing her shit racist personality #AmySchumerGottaGoParty — 💀The Alchemist💀 (@AlchemistEmrys) October 24, 2016

@FeministaJones I can't believe they found a way to appropriate a song that's LITERALLY about black female empowerment. pic.twitter.com/u8slZnRVTj — El Dude (@ElDudeAbides215) October 24, 2016

I don't even care why we throwing the #AmySchumerGottaGoParty I've been waiting on this day...

Someone fix me a plate. pic.twitter.com/X5OS0RIwGI — Ariel (@Revinpinkpumps) October 24, 2016

I'm coming to the #AmySchumerGottaGoParty but I'm a sit in the corner and glare at Jay-Z for putting that shit on Tidal. pic.twitter.com/UhriOjrP2b — Madam CJ Talker (@We2DopeGirls) October 24, 2016

While the video featured two black women and other women of color, and it did premiere on Tidal (meaning someone from Bey or Jay’s camp probably approved it), Schumer’s track record in regards to race has been questionable so the backlash wasn’t too surprising.

She’s been accused in the past for telling racist jokes, implying that black men are more sexually aggressive than others, and exploiting black women in her comedy. Some people (including Schumer herself) chalk up much of the criticism to internet call-out culture and political correctness. And though she’s seen as a feminist hero for many, the fact that the #AmySchumerGottaGoParty started trending at all is a huge indication that there’s still a large disconnect between Schumer and black women. Maybe in the future she’ll think of another, less tone deaf way to pay homage to King Bey.