On the Thanksgiving special of her hit podcast Not Gonna Lie, Kylie Kelce proved once again why she’s America’s favorite no-filter mom and wife of NFL legend Jason Kelce.

A fan slid into the Q&A with what they clearly thought was a cheeky “gotcha” question: why do all four of the Kelce daughters — Wyatt (6), Elliotte (4), Bennett (2), and baby Finnley — have traditionally masculine or gender-neutral names?

Kylie didn’t hesitate.

“Next question sounds like it’s just trolling, and I’m gonna tell you exactly why we did it,” she began, calm as ever. “Travis and I love gender-neutral names for our girls. Elliotte’s nickname is Ellie, so y’all can f–k off.”

The studio erupted, co-hosts lost it, and the clip immediately detonated across social media, racking up millions of views in under 24 hours.

The full names, for the record:

Wyatt Elizabeth Kelce
Elliotte Ray Kelce (goes by Ellie)
Bennett Llewellyn Kelce (goes by Bennie)
Finnley James Kelce

Kylie has never hidden the reasoning before, but this was the first time she delivered it with such delicious, unapologetic venom. Fans are calling it the most iconic mom-roast of 2025.

The internet’s reaction was instant chaos:

“Protect Kylie Kelce at all costs 😂🔥”
“When you try to mom-shame the wrong mom…”
“She said ‘gender-neutral household’ and meant it with her whole chest.”

It’s not the first time the Kelce girls’ names have sparked debate. Traditionalists have been side-eyeing the choices since Wyatt was born in 2019, with comment-section Karens insisting “those are boy names and you’re confusing them.” Kylie and Jason have always brushed it off, pointing out that strong, classic names know no gender — and apparently they were done being polite about it.

The timing couldn’t be better. With Travis Kelce and Taylor Swift dominating headlines, Kylie has quietly become the voice of unfiltered working-mom realness: raising four daughters under intense public scrutiny, co-parenting with a retired Super Bowl champ, and never once pretending to care about outdated gender rules.

In one sentence, she reminded everyone: these are 21st-century girls with 21st-century parents who let them be exactly who they want — starting with a name that doesn’t box them in.

So yeah, the Kelce daughters might have names you’d hear on a 1950s boys’ Little League team. And according to their mama, that’s exactly the point.

Mic dropped. Happy Thanksgiving indeed.