Golden Globes ceremony underscores Hollywood's waning influence
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS -- During Sunday's Golden Globes ceremony in posh Beverly Hills,
California, celebrities preached diversity and tolerance, some of them subtly or
not-so-subtly denouncing U.S. President-elect Donald Trump. Hollywood has
traditionally been an important force for America around the world, a "soft
power" export of U.S. culture, influencing hearts, minds and values. That role
has eroded over time. What exactly happened to Hollywood?
During the Cold War era, films such as "Top Gun," "Flashdance" and "Rocky"
promoted the ideals of hard work and triumph over adversity. After seeing
"Rocky" as a child, I went to sleep with extra motivation to get up at 4 a.m.
the next morning for competitive swimming practice. I wore legwarmers to school
like Jennifer Beals' ambitious character in "Flashdance" as an inspiration to
stay focused on my goals. After seeing the fighter pilots of "Top Gun," I was
inspired to pursue a scientific education that would leave open the door to
perhaps becoming a pilot myself one day.
The fact that the inspirational characters played by actors such as Tom Cruise
and Sylvester Stallone were men didn't obstruct the dreams that Hollywood
inspired in women during that era. I didn't get to the end of a "Rocky" film and
think, "Wow, that's inspiring. Too bad Rocky is a man and I'm a woman, so I
guess none of this applies to me."
Hollywood appealed to universal human values, regardless of race, gender or
origin. That's why it became arguably the most successful soft power export in
the history of the world.
But then two unfortunate things changed the nature of Hollywood.
On the domestic front, Hollywood became self-conscious of its role as an
influential force and transformed into a vehicle for the leftist values that
increasingly dominated the American political landscape. After the Cold War,
there was no opponent left to fight, so Hollywood drew battle lines within
Western culture itself. It became a pawn for leftist social engineering. The
universal values that were agnostic of gender and race were replaced by the
promotion of diversity in its most superficial forms.
Stars aligned themselves with the Democratic Party, which championed these
social divisions. We saw this in the recent presidential election, as scores of
celebrities threw their support behind Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton.
Meryl Streep, who received the Cecil B. DeMille Award for lifetime achievement
in film at this year's Golden Globes, jetted from outgoing President Barack
Obama's final White House party to the Globes ceremony, during which she slammed
Trump and celebrated diversity in her acceptance speech.
Internationally, Hollywood went from being a leader in shaping global values to
being a useful tool of the very worst of what globalization represents: the
collusion of establishment elites at the expense of the average citizen's
interests. (The entertainment industry is rife with tax breaks that the average
person can only dream of, for example.) Whether making videos slamming Trump on
behalf of establishment candidates like Clinton or fronting for globalist
conventions like the World Economic Forum in Davos, celebrities have aligned
against the interests of their audience, who find it increasingly difficult to
accept all of the preaching.
And while many people believe that globalization has been a detriment to their
interests, Hollywood has benefited from it, with big studios striking
co-production and financing deals with European, Chinese, Persian Gulf and other
state- controlled interests, many of which impose content and location
requirements. When you watch a Hollywood movie in the Western world these days,
there's a good chance it's not geared toward you, but rather toward an overseas
audience expected to account for a majority of the gross earnings. Tracking some
of the Hollywood films that recently put me to sleep in the theater, I noticed
that at least half (and sometimes upwards of two-thirds) of the box office
grosses typically come from overseas markets.
Hollywood has the right to seek out the best deals that it can so it can
continue to pay its stars the multimillion-dollar fees that they command. But
the film honchos shouldn't be surprised when they turn off the general public by
making movies that prioritize a hidden agenda or promote the globalist
establishment's superficial one-world values, which have been culturally and
economically detrimental to large swaths of the intended audience. Actors
shouldn't expect widespread support when they denounce the democratically chosen
president-elect as some kind of tyrant even though he intends to fight for the
average citizen's interests.
"Hollywood is crawling with outsiders and foreigners and if you kick them all
out, you'll have nothing to watch but football and mixed martial arts, which are
not the arts," Streep said in her acceptance speech.
Streep misses the point. Hollywood's dwindling appeal has nothing to do with the
presence of "outsiders and foreigners." It has everything to do with the
promotion of establishment and globalist values.
COPYRIGHT 2017 RACHEL MARSDEN