"And the Oscar for the best Trump-related meltdown goes to…"
By: Rachel Marsden
All that Hollywood A-listers’ did for Harris failed to bring her to office and some of them are now threatening to leave America
Hollywood and its waning political influence are both following the same
trajectory.
Every time there’s a US presidential election, much is made in the mainstream
media of celebrity endorsements. Others promise to bail out of the country if
their candidate doesn’t win. Because apparently the democracy they want is the
one where the plebes do what they’re told at the voting booth by a handful of
entertainers.
Richard Gere is moving to Spain now and the Western press suggests that it’s
because he’s angry that Trump conflated terrorists with refugees crashing the US
border. That’s actually an interesting debate. One that a guy who lives in a
gated mansion on 32 acres, with 11 bathrooms, a guest cottage, and a pool, might
be inclined to indulge, long before having to worry about actually grappling
with the more glaring and pressing aspects of the immigration issue that the
average citizen faces.
Trump’s reelection suggests that voters are too fed up with grossly unmanaged or
mismanaged immigration to concern themselves with the details. Which is also why
the average American didn’t lose their mind like the establishment did over
Trump’s remarks about Haitian migrants in Ohio eating people’s pets. They just
ripped off the audio of Trump’s voice and made videos on TikTok starring their
own pets looking shocked about the possibility of being eaten. Debate raged
about whether the assertion was even true, but it brought the immigration issue
to the forefront and, in any case, people were going to vote based on their
personal perceptions. Which would at least partly explain why Trump ended up
winning in Ohio by 12 points over Harris. Meanwhile, Gere was fiddling with the
wallpaper.
Gere’s palace in Connecticut was up for sale long before the election. His wife
is from Spain and he’s said that they’d like to spend time with her relatives.
It’s not like anyone would even notice where this guy lives, anyway. He and his
Hollywood pals are some of the biggest beneficiaries of globalism, constantly
crisscrossing the globe for work. Why do they even think that anyone would know,
or care, where they spend most of their time, anyway? No one’s going, like, “We
can’t lose that Richard Gere guy to Spain! Tell me who I need to vote for to
prevent that!”
The singer Cher has said that she’d leave if Trump won because the Trump show
is just too stressful. Leave for where? Who knows. A series of luxury hotels,
probably. Because although Cher has a massive isolated mansion in Malibu, she
always seems to be touring. Her ‘Farewell Tour’ was followed by her ‘Here We Go
Again’ tour, so her goodbyes probably shouldn’t be taken too seriously. “When
was Cher’s LAST farewell tour,” is actually a suggested Google search. Is actor
and Trump critic Tom Hanks still around? Who cares, he’s been a dual citizen of
Greece, anyway, where he owns property since 2020.
Game of Thrones actress Sophie Turner said that she’d move to the UK to flee
Trump. Except that she’s from there and is English. Did anyone even notice that
she had ever left? Returning from a long vacation isn’t really the same thing as
moving.
First-generation Latina actress America Ferrera said that, for her family’s
sake, she’d move to the UK – fleeing Trump, to whom even Britain’s BBC qualified
Latinos as “flocking.” Guess she didn’t get the memo.
Oscar winner Sharon Stone said over the summer, while at the Taormina Film
Festival in Sicily, that she was thinking of moving to Europe. “I am deeply
concerned with what’s happening in my country now. This is one of the first
times in my life that I’ve actually seen anyone running for office on a platform
of hate and oppression,” she said in reference to Trump. But Stone is already
known for spending considerable time in France, and the Portuguese press
suggested last year that she had already invested in that country’s real estate
“to be neighbors with George Clooney” near Lisbon.
The Western press has been buzzing about Prince Harry and Meghan Markle
potentially uprooting from their Montecito, California, mansion in the wake of
Trump’s win – but they’ve long been eyeing a place in Portugal, where Eugenie
his cousin already lives with her family.
If Trump hadn’t won, no one would have even likely noticed where these
celebrities were living. And it’s debatable whether Hollywood itself is even
relevant at all anymore in 2024, let alone the political views of those within
it. People seem more interested in watching each other’s homemade videos on
TikTok, much targeted by Western governments because they can’t control the
China-based app, and which serves up organic diversity compared to the Hollywood
offerings that now mandate specific diversity requirements to be considered for
awards.
“At least one of the lead actors or significant supporting actors submitted for
Oscar consideration” has to be “from an underrepresented racial or ethnic group
in a specific country or territory of production” that’s non-white, according to
the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Also, “At least 30% of all
actors not submitted for Oscar consideration” must be “from at least two
underrepresented groups.” Such policies would explain, for instance, the NBC
News headline from last year: “Cleopatra was not Black, Egypt tells Netflix in
growing feud ahead of new series.”
Hollywood closed ranks with an omerta around Harvey Weinstein, ignoring his
rampant sexual aggression for years, despite all their public preaching about
feminism. Stars at awards show podiums cried about the state of humanity while
privately partying with the likes of P. Diddy, now facing federal charges of sex
trafficking and sexual abuse, and exploitation of women.
Diddy’s ex-girlfriend, entertainer Jennifer Lopez, spoke at a campaign rally for
Kamala Harris and said that every Latino should be offended by a joke about
Puerto Rico that a professional comedian made at Trump’s Madison Square Garden
rally. Yet Trump enjoyed a 14-point bump in this demographic compared to 2020.
Guess they know humor when they hear it – which would explain why her “comedic”
film Gigli flopped in 2003 and, more recently, Shotgun Wedding on Netflix.
Performer Taylor Swift, arguably the biggest celebrity in the world right
now, was going to absolutely crush Trump by endorsing Harris, it was suggested.
All her Swifties would dutifully fall in line like little bedazzled soldiers. “I
will be casting my vote for Kamala Harris and Tim Walz in the 2024 Presidential
Election. I’m voting for @kamalaharris because she fights for the rights and
causes I believe need a warrior to champion them,” Swift posted to Instagram on
September 10.
What ended up happening instead is that fans of what several analysts have
described as Swift’s ”white feminism” – white female voters – chose 53% in favor
of Trump. Maybe they just figured that the guy whose primary concern is to
ensure that they have the ability to actually afford the exorbitantly priced
tickets to Swift’s concerts is more relevant than Harris’ virtue signaling –
pandering to women by talking about abortion and to minorities by talking like
Foghorn Leghorn?
I know what everyone’s thinking – who was the cast of that long-defunct show
about the fake White House, The West Wing, voting for? Well, at least they
must’ve thought that’s what everyone’s thinking. Since they went to the trouble
of reuniting just to star in a pro-Harris ad. “We choose freedom. We choose
Kamala Harris,” they said in a statement, signed by the likes of Martin Sheen,
Allison Janney, and Mary McCormack. The ad, featuring the notoriously anti-war
Sheen, was backed by the Lincoln Project, which is rife with neocons –
bedfellows almost as strange as neocon Harris campaign surrogate and former
congresswoman, Liz Cheney, being told by the left-leaning cast of ‘The View’
that she’d be a great secretary of defense, despite her support of the US-led
wars that her dad, Dick, helped kick off.
Clearly, the election didn’t work out the way that many of these celebrities had
hoped. Given their resources and options, I’m sure they’ll get over it, in
whichever mansion they choose to inhabit. They’d have gotten over it in any case
– unlike so many of the average people they ultimately failed to manipulate.
COPYRIGHT 2024 RACHEL MARSDEN