F.Y.P. ENTRY #001 - Nadia Boucher.
YOU Are The Reason Segregation Needs to Make a Comeback
Nadia Boucher Is Why Segregation Needs to Make a Comeback
You ever see a video so grotesquely familiar it doesn’t shock you—it just confirms everything you’ve been screaming into the void for years?
This bitch. Nadia Boucher. A name that should now live in infamy, not obscurity.
This isn’t just a dance teacher. This isn’t just an “oopsie” moment of forgetfulness. This is a masterclass in white entitlement wrapped in pastel leotards and weaponized hugs.
👀 Here’s What Happened:
At a recent competition, a group of young dancers stood on stage after performing. Coach Nadia handed out hugs to her white students, one by one. Warm, affirming, familiar.
And then there was Shaniah—six years old. The only Black (bi-racial) girl in the lineup.
She stepped forward.
Arms open. Heart open.
And Nadia? She walked the fuck away.
Refused to hug her. Refused to acknowledge her.
This wasn’t a miss. This wasn’t a slip.
This was deliberate, cold, public rejection of a child who had done nothing but show up and exist in Black skin.
Shaniah later asked her mom:
“Why didn’t she hug me?”
Because Nadia Boucher is the kind of woman who thinks her racism is too subtle to get caught.
But It Gets Worse:
When the family spoke up? The studio didn't apologize.
They kicked the child out.
They kicked her siblings out.
They called the mother “aggressive.”
The entire system circled the wagons around a mediocre white woman who couldn’t be bothered to treat a Black child with human decency onstage—and punished the family for refusing to stay silent.
This isn’t an isolated case.
This is the white playbook.
This is how Black kids get broken in public, then told they’re overreacting in private.
Let’s Talk About the Real Crime:
This is why integration without protection is bullshit.
Black parents—rightfully trying to get their kids “the best”—enroll them in white spaces, hoping access equals safety.
But behind every elite dance program, every “prestigious” school, every polished brochure with a sprinkle of diversity... there’s a Nadia. Or ten.
And it’s not just about hugs. It’s about messaging.
“You don’t belong.”
“You’re not like the rest.”
“You’ll always be the afterthought.”
That is the internal monologue planted in Black kids by white educators who smile in your face and erase you on stage.
And Let’s Be Real About the Bigger Threat:
This woman is not just a dance coach.
She’s a special education teacher in Simsbury Public Schools.
Let that sink in.
Because if she’s this comfortable showing open, unapologetic bias on a stage with cameras rolling—what the fuck do you think she’s doing behind classroom doors?
To neurodivergent Black kids?
To children who already live under a microscope, only to be met with racist indifference disguised as “discipline” or “structure”?
You think this is about a hug?
This is about harm with institutional access.
This is about giving someone with obvious bias the power to shape how vulnerable children are treated—and then acting shocked when the results are trauma in therapy and kids who grow up thinking they're defective.
🎤 FINAL VERDICT:
So to Nadia Boucher—the racist dance teacher at Dance Xpressions in Plainville, Connecticut,
who also masquerades as a special education teacher at Simsbury Public Schools...
I want to give you the loudest, most unapologetic, permanently archived:
FUCK. YOU.
You don’t get to hide behind job titles and fake smiles after emotionally gutting a child on stage.
You don’t get to be entrusted with the care of any student—especially not those most at risk—and walk away like none of this happened.
You don’t get to be the face of public humiliation and private pain, and still cash checks signed in the name of “education.”
Congratulations!
Your name is now immortalized on the F.Y.P.
You earned it.
And we won’t let people forget.