Matt McGorry. Photo: Alberto E. Rodriguez/Getty Images

In an essay response to Lemonade, Piers Morgan remembers a very British day he once had with Beyoncé. It does sound lovely, truly: They had tea and scones and visited Harrods to buy her album. Sign me up.

'I don’t think people think about my race..they look at me as an entertainer & musician & I’m very happy about that.' Beyoncé to me, 2011. — Piers Morgan (@piersmorgan) April 25, 2016

Woke bae Matt McGorry swooped in with some valid points:

A man who loves his mom can still be a misogynist, right? I don't believe that saying you have "huge @piersmorgan https://t.co/7WA9fEquLY — Matt McGorry (@MattMcGorry) April 25, 2016

.@piersmorgan respect" for her (as an artist & businesswoman) doesn't mean you can't also be supporting racism (unbeknownst to you). It's no — Matt McGorry (@MattMcGorry) April 25, 2016

.@piersmorgan different than saying you have "black friends" and therefore can't be racist. Do you agree with that? — Matt McGorry (@MattMcGorry) April 25, 2016

And the discussion continues. Matt drops some more knowledge. Then Piers just throws it back to a pic featuring tea and scones. A British exit?

I think I'm allowed to critique Beyoncé's new very political work without being branded racist, @MattMcGorry. — Piers Morgan (@piersmorgan) April 25, 2016

.@piersmorgan spectrum and you don't have to "feel hateful" to be doing a disservice to anti-racism and thus, supporting racism. Make sense? — Matt McGorry (@MattMcGorry) April 25, 2016

.@piersmorgan I think it depends what aspect of the work you're critiquing. If you don't like the melodies that's one thing. But if you're — Matt McGorry (@MattMcGorry) April 25, 2016

.@piersmorgan critiquing her way of speaking about her experiences as a black woman (something you and I will never experience) you are — Matt McGorry (@MattMcGorry) April 25, 2016

.@piersmorgan essentially colluding with the status quo (which is the silencing and discrimination of black women). Truth is, no one sees — Matt McGorry (@MattMcGorry) April 25, 2016

.@piersmorgan themselves as racist. I can even imagine the KKK saying, "We aren't racist it's just that black people..." Racism exists on a — Matt McGorry (@MattMcGorry) April 25, 2016