Travis Kelce has been humorously criticized for his old tweets on New Heights Live

Travis Kelce was hilariously trashed during his and older brother Jason Kelce’s New Heights live show Thursday night in Ohio during a spelling bee, asking contestants to guess words Travis misspelled on social media.

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James spelled the word squirrel correctly as part of the athletic team Thursday night.

As part of the ‘Lombaby Great Games’ show, which pitted an athletic team against an academic team, a Cincinnati student-athlete had to spell squirrel correctly to win that round for his team.

Jizzle James, son of former NFL running back Edgerrin James, appeared and spelled the word correctly to give the athletic team the victory.

‘I just gave a piece of bread to a squirrel and it destroyed everything!!! I had no idea they ate bread like that!! Haha #crazy,” Kelce’s original tweet from 2011 read.

Another part of the competition before the live episode of the podcast was members of each team throwing Skyline Chili at each other.

James spelled the word squirrel correctly as part of the athletic team Thursday night.

Kelce admitted to using Twitter as a diary long before he became super famous in the NFL.

Kelce admitted to using Twitter as a diary long before he became super famous in the NFL.

He talked more about his now infamous tweet where he was surprised by a squirrel eating bread.

He went on to discuss his now-famous tweet in which he was taken aback to see a squirrel consuming bread.

Unlike his father, who played college football in Miami before going on to have an 11-year NFL career, James decided to pursue basketball.

Only two Bearcats, including the younger James, participated in every game played by the Cincinnati basketball team in the previous campaign.

According to the 247Sports composite, James was a four-star recruit in the Class of 2023 and was rated as the No. 12 point guard in the country for his class.

When James successfully spelled the word squirrel, Jason Kelce leaped off the platform and hugged him.

On a second try, James spelled the term inhibition incorrectly.