Ramona Singer cut from Bravocon after using partial racial slur in text to Page Six reporter

Ramona Singer cut from Bravocon after using partial racial slur in text to Page Six reporter

Bravo is getting off the Ramona coaster.

Just hours after Ramona Singer texted part of a racial slur to a Page Six reporter, her name disappeared from the BravoCon app.

The former “Real Housewives of New York City” star was expected to attend this upcoming weekend’s three-day event in Las Vegas, but a source told Page Six she will no longer be attending the festival in light of her actions.

Page Six had reached out to Singer for her reaction to Vanity Fair’s exposé about Bravo, which alleged she had used the N-word in conversation with a black crew member during production of Season 13.

In her response, she attempted to defend herself, but ended up using the slur once again.

Ramona Singer has been cut from BravoCon, Page Six exclusively learned. Charles Sykes/Bravo via Getty Images The news comes just hours after she texted part of a racial slur to a Page Six reporter. Page Six

“And the word I used was ‘NWord’ Not n-g…,” she texted a Page Six reporter on Tuesday.

The Vanity Fair feature claimed that Singer’s alleged use of the racial slur became a complaint within Shed Media, Warner Bros. Discovery, Bravo and NBCUniversal.

At the time, Singer denied using the slur and an internal investigation was “inconclusive.”

Page Six had reached out to Singer for her reaction to Vanity Fair’s exposé about Bravo, which alleged she had used the N-word in conversation with a black crew member during production of Season 13. Ralph Bavaro/Bravo via Getty Images In her response, she attempted to defend herself, but ended up using the slur once again. NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images

However, Eboni K. Williams, who was interviewed by Vanity Fair for the exposé, claimed the 66-year-old reality TV star made other offensive comments in the past.

Williams, who was the first black “Housewife” to appear on “RHONY,” claimed Singer said “most” black people don’t have fathers present in their lives while participating in a training with two racial justice representatives, a publicist from Bravo and a communications expert from NBCUniversal.

“‘What if they don’t have a father? Why can’t I say that?'” Singer allegedly asked, according to Williams. “‘Most of them don’t.'”

“And the word I used was ‘NWord’ Not n-g…,” she texted a Page Six reporter on Tuesday. Bravo

Leah McSweeney, who also starred on “RHONY” and was interviewed for the exposé, corroborated Williams’ account.

“Singer, however, told Vanity Fair, “The training included ‘open dialogue.’ In that spirit, I asked a question about a statistic I had read about single-parent households, where children with single-parent households were statistically less likely to succeed than two-parent households.”

The story is developing…