Some More News - SMN: Is Hollywood Actually Woke?
Episode Date: March 8, 2023Hi. There's been a lot of talk about Hollywood going woke and thus going broke. But is this really true? Is Hollywood, perhaps, pretty un-woke? Sources: https://docs.google.com/do...cument/d/1dbgpazT9a9MqgJdZ-3W1f0UPOVVhUHjl-bRUCQ0yyp8/edit?usp=sharing Please fill out our SURVEY: https://kastmedia.com/survey/ Support us on our PATREON: http://patreon.com/somemorenews Check out our MERCH STORE: https://www.teepublic.com/stores/somemorenews?ref_id=9949 SUBSCRIBE to SOME MORE NEWS: https://tinyurl.com/ybfx89rh  Subscribe to the Even More News and SMN audio podcasts here: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/some-more-news/id1364825229 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6ebqegozpFt9hY2WJ7TDiA?si=5keGjCe5SxejFN1XkQlZ3w&dl_branch=1 Stitcher: https://www.stitcher.com/show/even-more-news  Follow us on social media: Twitter: https://twitter.com/SomeMoreNews Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/SomeMoreNews/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SomeMoreNews/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@somemorenews Take back your online privacy today and use our link to get 3 extra months free. https://ExpressVPN.com/morenews Bombas makes getting active more comfortable with socks that support your sport, breathable t-shirts that keep you from overheating, and underwear made to move with you. Go to https://Bombas.com/morenews and use code morenews for 20% off your first purchase.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
.
Greetings news believers and news heretics.
This is your news god, Cody Johnston here with the news.
And here is that news.
Some of it.
Oh, Lordy-loo!
And Lord again, Lord being me.
No time for that news from before
because here's some breaking news.
Hollywood wokepocalypse! Oh dear Christ, oh dear sexy, turnt up Christ, it's happening.
We here in Hollywood have gone woke, and now all of us Hollywood elites, that's me, are
now broke.
Why does Hollywood lean so far to the left?
Woke Hollywood seems to be eating itself alive.
Now that the awards have turned into one big far left protest where self-obsessed celebrities berate the American people
and tell them how to think,
well, now the viewership has completely bottomed out.
It's been a bad year for Woke Hollywood
and it hasn't provided a lot of great entertainment
outside of Tom Cruise, but it has provided a lot of great entertainment outside of Tom Cruise,
but it has provided a lot of content filled with unintended hilarity.
There was a brief moment in time when millions of people were somehow duped into believing that Avatar was a good film,
but the fever broke rather suddenly, and most of those who had fallen under its spell
quickly realized the whole thing was just Fern Gully as reimagined by the Blue Man Group.
Not exactly a plot twist, therefore, to tell you that
the sequel fizzled at the box office on its first weekend of release. On top of that, Cameron happens
to be one of the wokest directors currently working in Hollywood. Avatar is, of course,
an environmentalism allegory about the perils of colonialism.
Oh, dang! I can't believe the new Avatar movie bombed at the box office. I'm definitely going
to assume that the thing that Matt Walsh said is true and not easily look it up
to see that it was actually one of the highest grossing
movies of all time.
Anywho, I guess it's time to pack it in now that myself
and all the other Hollywood elites are broke
because I'm a Hollywood elite.
And we went woke you see, two true things I just said.
Or wait, ooh, counterpoint.
Maybe I should actually check to see if Hollywood
is actually woke and by extension broke,
which I guess is the metric we're using
to determine brokenness, because here's some news.
Before the pandemic, it seems that the film industry
was actually doing very well for itself.
Did you know this?
That the international film industry
putting out billion dollar movies every year is actually not broke?
And to claim that it's going broke for any reason
is a very silly thing that only a small child would believe.
I'm still a big Wig-a-Lith though, that part was true.
But regardless of the brokeness of the situation,
these desperate woke obsessed freaks do raise
another question that's maybe worth exploring.
Is Hollywood actually woke?
Right, so here's the thing.
Hollywood has in some form or another been accused
of being woke or politically correct
for a long time now.
The original Avatar, for example,
got heat from conservatives
for its dastardly environmental message.
Same for Wall-E, which was accused
of being liberal alarmist propaganda.
Even the sum of all fears,
a freaking Jack Ryan pro CIA movie
was accused of political correctness.
And don't get me started on Disney, too late I'm started.
Here's a 1994 article about the Lion King
that specifically addresses the quote,
"'Culture war around the film.'"
Here's an LA Times article from the following year
that claims that the film Pocahontas quote,
"'Gives new meaning to the phrase politically correct
"'because they dared to hire Native American actors
to voice the Native American characters,
which seems reasonable.
I mean, how could they be so reckless?
Grr!
Of course, none of that answers the question
as to whether Hollywood is actually woke or not.
But before we figure that out,
we first have to define what woke actually means.
By now, you might've realized that the term
is kind of a catch-all for whatever conservatives
have decided to hate that week, or day, or minutes,
honestly, what are they mad at now?
Ah, the woke cranberry sauce, whatever.
And like a lot of honky-goings on,
this phrase was of course stolen
from people with darker skin.
It turns out black Americans have been saying woke
for a very long time, since at least the 1920s and 30s.
And throughout pretty much the entire 20th century,
it had a single standard relatively fixed meaning.
Woke was an adjective describing a black person
who was aware of anti-blackness as a powerful cultural,
social, and political force in the world.
This knowledge prompted them to remain alert
and on the lookout for signs of systemic injustice.
Many scholars trace the term back to a 1923 collection
of sayings and ideas from the social activist,
Marcus Garvey, who wrote a call for greater awareness
among black people that opened with the rallying cry,
wake up Ethiopia, wake up Africa.
Soon after the phrase stay woke
also entered African-American vernacular English.
It's even featured in a 1938 song
from legendary blues musician, Lead Belly,
who hopefully will not hit us with a copyright strike
because he's been dead since 1949.
I advise everybody to be a little careful
when they go along through that,
but stay woke, keep their eyes open.
Let's do a David Lean style match cut to 2014,
when the deaths of Michael Brown and Eric Garner
kicked off the Black Lives Matter
and related social movements.
The concept of wokeness and remaining woke
suddenly received national attention
in not just editorial headlines, but also popular songs,
which were later featured in even more popular movies.
But once mainstream culture got their hands on Woke,
as you would expect, everything started to shift and change.
We gentrified Woke, and over time,
new Woke became basically a catch-all word to stand in
for any position to the left
of Mussolini instituting a flat tax.
Or sometimes it's just like
a black person being in something.
And so since it was hijacked by the right wing,
for the sake of this accusation of woke Hollywood,
we're going to define it based on their parameters.
And if you want an official definition from a conservative,
well, it just so happens that the leathery Ronald DeSantis
was actually forced to give an official definition
during a recent trial.
And the definition given by his lawyers was, quote,
"'The belief there are systemic injustices
"'in American society and the need to address them.'"
DeSantis' communications director would add
that wokeness was also quote,
"'A slang term for progressive activism.'"
To you, sure.
And so there you have it.
When conservatives complain about woke culture,
they are apparently complaining about the belief
that there are systemic injustices in American society
that need to be addressed.
Wow, they really are just racist, huh?
But we're not here to talk about wokeness as a concept.
This is about Hollywood and what specifically Hollywood
is accused of being, starting of course,
with diverse casting.
With the Little Mermaid, can we also just mention
that from a scientific perspective,
it doesn't make a lot of sense
to have someone with darker skin who lives deep in the ocean. I mean, if anything, I mean,
not only should the Little Mermaid be pale, she should actually be translucent. If you look at
deep sea creatures, they're like translucent. They have no kind of pigmentation whatsoever.
Thanks for that science lesson about mermaids, Beardo. It's cool for me to call him that because
I also have a beard. Now, this is something we have seen for a while now,
the complaint that films are recasting characters
with more diversity in mind,
because after decades of white-centric kids films,
it's bad, according to, let's call them racists,
to give non-white kids someone to look up to.
Since 2011, leading roles for non-whites
in major Hollywood films have nearly quadrupled.
As a result, we've now seen a number of these kinds
of controversial casting decisions
in which Hollywood productions have experimented
with more diverse international ensembles
in tentpole releases.
In several cases, actors from underrepresented communities
have even appeared in what were once considered
conventionally straight white person kinds of roles, only to receive pushback
from particularly vocal pockets of online fandom.
Amazon's Lord of the Rings prequel series,
which cast black actors as members of JRR Tokens'
entirely fictional fantasy races,
gave guys who own at least three swords
such a frenzied meltdown that the company
had to temporarily shut down user reviews.
Disney's Lightyear and Strange World
each featured LGBTQ main characters,
prompting this heated response
from one extremely concerned nine-year-old fan.
So you have to screen everything right now.
That's why one of our goals here at Daily Wire Plus
is we'll do the screening for it.
We'll just make the content.
And then you can trust because we share your values
that we are not going to cram down
all the values of the progressive left,
the transgressive left on your kids.
Disney has no such qualms.
In fact, this is their goal.
They've openly stated this is not by accident.
They're doing this because this is part of an agenda.
It wasn't even a main character in Lightyear.
It was a side character.
But yes, let's let Ben Shapiro screen your movies for you.
For he is definitely someone who understands
what makes movies good and is not in any way
a bitter and failed screenwriter
who also happens to get offended
when there's a two second same sex kiss
in a movie about a fake movie
that a toy character from a real movie is based on
within the universe of that movie.
Though for a fair and balanced look,
here's a contrasting review
from one of Ben Shapiro's peers.
I think a two second kiss scene
between two girls is nothing.
Well, everybody has an opinion.
Indeed, this angry young lad is not alone.
There are large internet communities
dedicated entirely to tracking and decrying
all of this super woke, extremely radical Hollywood content.
It's become such a fixation for so many,
it seems undeniable that we're talking about a real trend.
Look how many examples they have!
And those are just the films and shows
that actually get produced.
There's also an entire genre of theoretical complaints
about classic concepts that today's Hollywood
would never touch
because of the disgrace of wokeness.
You know, you could never make Blazing Saddles today, Gate.
And yet, and yet, it's kind of not really true at all.
None of it.
Of course you could make Blazing Saddles today.
Most of the people claiming you couldn't
seem to completely misunderstand what the movie was about.
I mean, except for Mel Brooks himself,
who also claimed this.
But like, it's not about how racism is good and funny.
You know, why wouldn't they be able to make that?
Because white people say the N-word?
I mean, Quentin Tarantino seems to have a minimum quota
for white people saying the N- N word and he's doing fine.
Robert Downey Jr. did blackface in a film
the same year he played Iron Man
and became the biggest star in the world.
Not to mention that the people saying this
seem to forget a pretty important detail,
which is that Mel Brooks couldn't make
"'Blazing Saddles' then either.
In the same interview that he claims the film
couldn't be made today, he also notes that, quote,
"'They wanted to bury me and the film.
"'The head of distribution told the owners
"'not to release the picture, but they only did
"'because it was already booked in theaters
"'and they didn't have a picture
"'they could replace it with.'"
One of the studio notes he describes
is that they wanted him to recast the black sheriff
as a white actor because they were afraid
of all the racial jokes.
In other words, not only did he struggle
to make it at the time, but he struggled
because it was tackling the concept of racism,
something the modern film industry satirizes
all the damn time, meaning that not only could you
make Blazing Saddles today, but you might even have
an easier time making it today.
So make the damn film.
It's fucking fine.
I mean, it wouldn't actually be fine
because I don't wanna see a remake of Blazing Saddles,
but you get the point.
I mean, I would be great for the Gene Wilder part,
but that's, you know,
maybe if Mel was doing it himself, I'd be interested,
but generally, no thank you,
but thank you for the offer regarding my talents.
Very gracious.
So besides the accusations of forced diversity and movies that couldn't exist today
because of edginess or whatever,
there's also the sorbo of it all.
What I mean is that Hollywood wokeness
goes hand in hand with Hollywood cancel culture,
specifically aimed at conservatives
seemingly blacklisted for their politics.
Although it's funny how the people who complain about this
are always artists like Rob Schneider
and not say Adam Sandler,
who's also a conservative but gets plenty of work.
Tim Allen is another brave conservative,
once claiming that being so in Hollywood
was like being in Nazi Germany.
You know, like how the Jews all got hit shows
on the Fox network that lasted nine seasons
before moving on to a Disney Plus show.
Woke Disney and their Tim Allen shows.
It's almost as if the people making this claim
aren't being blacklisted for their politics
so much as they have careers they're not satisfied with
and can't cope with the fact that they might be the problem.
Scott Baio and Dean Cain and Christy Swanson,
people we haven't thought about for decades
are now claiming that the real reason for that
is because they're right-leaning.
Meanwhile, we have hardcore Republicans like Kelsey Grammer
getting entire revival shows.
And while he has said that it does make him a target,
he's also said multiple times that being a Republican
hasn't really been a big problem in Hollywood,
and generally he jokes about it when asked.
It is a funny thing. You spend a lot of time racking your brain about it. And I finally,
I did think part of me thought, you know, maybe this, you know, this being an openly
Republican guy in Hollywood might have something to do with it. I don't know if it does. I mean,
I do know that there is a there's a hallmark of tolerance in my community out there that
may or may not be true.
I don't know.
It's so strange because the idea is that being a Republican is a dirty secret when half of the country is.
It is the worst thing you could be there.
But you know what?
It's also in my nature.
The thing is I have always been a rebel.
If you ever tell me the way to think, I'm bound to think the other way.
So I live in Hollywood.
So what else would I be?
Hey now, what a charming guy.
He should be a successful comedic actor or something.
The idea that Hollywood is somehow blacklisting
conservatives is a big silly pill
that's very hard to swallow considering that right now
in 2023, a giant superhero film is coming out
starring a vocal anti-vaxxer, Jordan Peterson loving right wing weirdo.
Mel Gibson, a man who has gone on record saying
horrible shit about Jews and minorities,
has been making mainstream movies for decades
after saying those things.
He was up for a best director Oscar in 2017.
So I don't know, it doesn't really seem like Hollywood
is all that woke in the hyperbolic way
that conservatives treat it.
It still makes edgy movies and cast tons
of conservative actors.
And really, I guess the only woke sin
is that they have more diverse casts now,
which I would argue is only a thing to be mad at
if you don't like other races.
But of course, we're not even at our first ad break,
which means that we have more to say about this.
And in fact, when you look at how often Hollywood continues
to cast people like Mel Gibson,
you kind of have to wonder if it's even woke at all.
Perhaps it's actually pretty fucking conservative leaning.
How's that for a pre-ad hook, huh?
Stick around, suckers.
Hello, it's Dr. Cody Johnston here.
Are you suffering from phonitis?
You can't stay away from your phone,
even though you know that your mobile carrier
is collecting your data.
Sadly, the only way to cure this
is through expensive brain surgery
that only I can perform.
But in the meantime, you can use ExpressVPN.
That's an app that prevents your phone carrier
from seeing which sites you visit
and sell it to third parties.
That's why I use ExpressVPN.
Plus, my medical practice isn't exactly legal,
so it helps to limit who gets my information.
And it's not just your phone.
ExpressVPN works on all of your devices too.
So don't let some big corporation steal your data.
Go to expressvpn.com slash more news
to get three extra months free.
Tell them your doctor sent you.
Don't tell them it's me though.
Then mail me $5 because that referral isn't free,
but don't tell them it was me.
Please don't, but still send me the $5.
That's e-x-p-r-e-s-s-v-p-n.com slash more news.
One more time, expressvpn.com slash more news.
Hey, welcome back woke moralists.
That's of course what we're talking about here, wokeness.
And the accusations that Hollywood is filled
with woke lefties brainwashing our children
into having big Satan lovingloving abortion orgies.
Aborgies, as we call them in the biz,
because I'm in the biz, I'm available and in the biz.
But as I teased before the break, what if, perhaps,
not only is Hollywood not that woke,
but what if they're actually kind of unwoke?
Let's start with the idea of diversity
being shoved down our throats.
Having a diverse movie actually, according to nerds,
makes that movie more successful.
But that's of course an oversimplification
of what makes a movie a hit.
Marvel, for example, is the current baseline
for the Hollywood blockbuster.
People will see a Marvel movie no matter how diverse
or undiverse the cast is or how shitty the plot is,
it seems.
It's a tri-yearly blockbuster event.
And while I'm not gonna deny that they've been mindful
to include a lot of walks of life,
those movies are, to be gentle,
an Alaskan cracker factory.
Alaska because of the snow, you get it.
Let's take a look.
Phase one was five movies starring white men
leading to a final film starring all of those white people
plus a token white woman.
Phase two was five movies starring white men,
but got really woke by adding a black man and black woman
as side characters.
Age of Ultron would then add three more white characters,
although I guess in fairness, one of them was red,
but Gamora is green.
So does that cancel it out?
I don't, I don't know.
I don't think it's a healthy way to view this.
So let's move on to phase three, which finally,
after 10 years, introduced a leading person of color
with Black Panther,
but only after adding two more white characters.
I'm not knocking any of those movies for having white heroes.
I'm laying out no opinion on the goodness or badness
of this
but it's not exactly a beacon of diversity, is it?
And in fact, it doesn't seem very diverse at all.
Hey, remember how after 20 freaking movies,
Marvel boasted having their first gay character
only for it to be a three second cameo
by one of the film's directors?
But at least that was the Avengers director
who wasn't the shitty and abusive asshole.
So there's that.
And it's not just Marvel.
Look at the 10 highest grossing films of 2022.
Yes, Wakanda Forever is right there.
Fun movie too.
There's no post credit scene about the next five movies,
which is very avant-garde.
But the other nine movies are all starring white actors.
In some cases, white actors in very uncomfortable costumes
and makeup situations.
Yeah, way to rock the dreadlocks
and Native American style war paint, Jake Sully.
Is it woke diversity to take several white actors
and dress them up like obvious allegories for native tribes?
Again, not talking about quality here,
but just pointing out that this forced diversity
is like a drop in a very white bucket.
Nothing against the films themselves.
I mean, except for Jurassic World Dominion,
otherwise known as Jurassic Park 6, Jurassic World 3.
Film finds a way to be terrible.
So while it's true that black Americans
are approaching more proportional on-screen representation,
most non-white males continue to be underrepresented
on every single level of the entertainment industry.
According to UCLA, between 2020 and 2021,
only around 25% of the leads
on scripted broadcast series were non-white.
Latinos make up 19% of the US population
and accounted for nearly 29%
of total movie tickets sold in 2020.
And yet Latino actors played just 5.4%
of the country's lead characters in movies that year.
Considering how much we Hollywood elites love money,
you'd think we'd at least want to pander
to a group that makes up 30% of the audience.
And while we're starting to see a very small shift,
Native Americans were represented in fewer than 1%
of lead roles on TV shows,
and in fewer than 2% of lead roles on TV shows and in fewer than 2% of acting roles overall.
According to GLAAD, only 16 out of the 77 films
released to US theaters in 2021
featured LGBTQ characters at all,
and 70% of those characters were gay men.
Just two films from that year featured bi characters.
And Steven Spielberg's West Side Story
was the lone example of a transgender character
in a major theatrical release.
It was worth noting that we're not talking about
how these people were depicted, mind you.
Historically, roles for gang members and thugs in films
disproportionately go to black actors
and also Jeff Goldblum for some reason.
Not to mention that if you're a Native American in a movie,
you're probably super fucking magical.
Although there's also a chance you might fight a predator,
so that's pretty great, honestly.
And even when they mean well,
there's a long trend of every gay character
having the average lifespan of a Crystal Lake counselor.
My point is, just a higher number of diverse roles
doesn't mean the film itself is especially progressive.
In fact, one thing people seem to ignore
in this conversation about wokeness is that
while Hollywood might do a lot of skin deep changes
toward diversity, the plots and content of their films
remain pretty fucking un-woke.
And I think the fact that conservatives
have managed to paint Hollywood
as a super left-leaning woke haven
really speaks to how much they've hijacked this debate.
Because the woke morals described in these films
are actually moderate at best.
And by focusing on casting alone,
it's easy to completely ignore this.
Like for both sides, it's troubling that the pass fail
is often based only on who is represented in these films
and not what the films are representing.
So like, I'll give you some examples
and you tell me how woke these examples are.
And remember, for the moment,
that means the belief there are systemic injustices
in American society and the need to address them
according to Leather Ron.
Let's start with Marvel and how a great deal
of their woke messages about systemic injustices
always seem to come from the villains.
Erik Killmonger makes a lot of good points
about historical double standards
and using Wakandan technology
to help others around the world.
And Hela calls out Asgard's ugly history of colonialism
for the first time.
But in every case, their arguments are undermined
when the characters inevitably go too far
in the pursuit of their goals, turn violent,
and must be stopped by superheroes
who explicitly defend the status quo.
The Flag Smashers of Falcon and Winter Soldier
are the only characters in the entire MCU to date
who have expressed genuine concern
about the post-Blip refugee crisis.
If only they weren't going to kill
that van full of innocent people,
we might almost have to listen to them.
Darn it.
It's interesting how in every event
they present a real systemic injustice
and then almost entirely skip over
the need to actually fix or address it.
And what I think is absolutely amazing
is that while that still feels progressive,
it's actually the same tactic that superhero fiction
has been using for decades.
It's not beautiful, it's wrong.
Wrong, Wendy, it's right.
You know the old proverb, money is the root of all evil?
We're doing the world a favor by destroying gold.
That's from a 1973 episode of Super Friends
where two villains simply named Hank and Ben
are destroying the world's gold
because they feel that the pursuit of wealth
is ruining the world.
Welcome to the fight, comrades Hank and Ben.
But in the end, they're stopped by the superheroes
who condemn their actions as noble but misguided.
And this is actually a running theme of that show.
Villains who take drastic measures like shrinking people
or moving stars or terraforming the planet,
all in the specific interest of helping the world
with things like resource management and wealth inequality.
It's actually a real bummer how this 70s show
seems consumed with the exact same issues
we haven't solved today.
And the lesson is always the same.
It's not what the villains want to do that's wrong,
it's how they're doing it.
And so ultimately, it's a cowardly tactic used by writers
who don't want to appear politically extreme.
You're right, Thanos, resources are limited.
If only you weren't a genocidal asshole.
Oh well, back to the status quo.
After all, the main goal of these films and shows
isn't to shift political attitudes in any single direction,
it's to sell tickets.
Plus Disney Plus subscriptions, Funko Pops,
and a wristband that gets you in line for a ticket
to buy the pass to get the exclusive merch
from the exit line of Disney World's
new 3D VR Zootopia experience.
And you don't make money by pointing out systemic injustices
in American society and then proposing a dramatic way
to address them.
Again, their words, systemic injustices.
Some examples of that would be police brutality,
economic inequality, gun violence, corporate wage theft,
that one Waffle House that doesn't let me eat there anymore,
climate inaction, and the white Christian nationalism
baked into our government.
And yet, not only do we rarely see those types
of injustices renounced in this woke Hollywood,
but actually supported and celebrated with films
about how corporations and rich people
are worthy of reverence, or how vigilante justice is cool,
or how heroes are special people
who are often predetermined from birth
while other people really gotta pull themselves up
by their bootstraps or better yet,
find a rich person to impress and or bone.
Films about the good old days and how they were rough
but also super great.
Oh, and you gotta have cars and guns.
We love those cars and guns and America
and our founders were really cool
and hid a lot of treasure for some reason.
Hey, how about the fact
that one of the highest grossing film series
is balls deep in Christian and family values?
It's actually pretty wild how Western,
specifically Christian religion,
is casually baked into most major films.
There is an entire genre just around Christmas.
Heck, almost every horror movie about demons
or vampires out there is supposing a world
where the Catholic views on God and the devil
are 100% accurate, except for the Babadook.
He was actually a Mormon.
That explains why he's dressed so nice.
Ah, that Babadook.
You know, everyone's always saying
that I could be a Babadook if there was like
another Babadook film.
I got that Duke energy.
Anyway, the fact of the matter is
that we're so used to an industry
designed to accommodate white Christian men
that anything slightly deviating from that is deemed woke.
The result being that even the fiction
we traditionally see as progressive
is way closer to being centrist.
Like we all had a laugh when Fox News complained
that Star Trek got woke because most people would agree
that that show has always been progressive.
And yet even that show is about a military fleet
conquering and assimilating other cultures.
And also that one baseball episode from DS9.
So think about that baseball episode from Deep Space Nine.
Also on that subject, I've just been talking about that one definition of wokeness
and not all the other ways Hollywood
is actually pretty conservative.
Like, did you notice that when I showed
the top grossing films of 2022,
the film at number one was Top Gun Maverick.
If you don't recall,
that is a movie about how being in war is fun and cool.
And don't get me wrong,
that film was objectively amazing to watch,
perhaps after eating mushrooms, but also.
I'm gonna go.
Copy that. Team Hyrman.
Damn, so cool.
Wish I could have watched that after eating mushrooms,
but alas, I didn't do that.
That's an ad for the US Air Force
that ran in movie theaters before the new Top Gun film,
the highest grossing film of last year.
And this is pretty unsurprising. After all, the original Top Gun film, the highest grossing film of last year. And this is pretty unsurprising.
After all, the original Top Gun, also awesome,
famously led to a surge in Navy recruitment rates,
and this new one was aiming to be no different.
But what might be surprising
is that it doesn't stop at that one franchise.
The US Department of Defense and military
have worked hand in hand with the American film industry
since its inception over a century ago.
In fact, the very first Best Picture Oscar winner,
1927's Wings, centers on combat pilots in World War I
and was produced with help from the US War Department,
which had been initially consulted
by screenwriter John Monk Saunders
before they'd even started filming.
By the end of World War II,
the army had an entire office dedicated
to collaborations with Hollywood,
sometimes even producing their own films.
And this continues to today.
The US military sometimes even providing their own weapons
to use in the film under the specific requirements
that the movie in question will quote,
"'uphold the integrity of the men and women in uniform
"'and the ability to do their job.
That's a direct quote from the defense department branch
chief for entertainment media, a job that exists.
Super woke stuff is the point,
woker than Captain Marvel of all things,
a film that was especially attacked
for having a woke message.
Do you remember that?
Do you remember how woke Captain Marvel was
with their direct partnership with the US Air Force?
The Air Force is such a huge part of this movie.
We wanted to take a moment to spend some time
with some real service men and women
who are joining us here tonight at the premiere.
Patooy!
Disgusting, woke garbage the military is.
No, really, they think the military is woke now,
which really gives you an idea of either
how far to the right conservatives have moved
or how nonsense the word woke has become.
When Captain Marvel teamed with the US Air Force
on that movie's 2019 release, the military went all in,
purchasing pre-show recruitment ads
in 3,600 theaters nationwide,
space on nerd-friendly internet sites and videos,
and even sponsoring the film's red carpet premiere.
See, this is why these films punt the extreme politics
to the villains, or always blame government misdeeds
on a group of bad apples.
These movies are never going to speak out
against the military-industrial complex
or the larger system itself as a problem,
because they can't.
Like literally can't under contracts with the government.
It's the same with spy movies
or films about the surveillance state,
most of which are produced with the direct involvement
of US intelligence agencies like the CIA and NSA.
Again, this goes back to the earliest days
of American cinema.
But in the mid 1990s, the CIA took a more active interest
in these collaborations and formally opened up an office
to liaison with the entertainment industry.
In the years since, they've worked closely
with the creators of dozens of films and TV shows
from Black Hawk Down to The Americans
to Zero Dark Thirty to Homeland.
In 1996, clandestine officer Chase Brandon
was engaged to work directly with Hollywood studios
and media companies to improve the agency's image.
A big part of his strategy, big budget,
very visible adaptations of Tom Clancy's books
about daring yet brilliant CIA analyst Jack Ryan.
That's weird.
Amazon has a new Jack Ryan TV series on TV right now
starring the allegedly charming news show thief,
John Krasinski.
Chase Brandon, by the way,
covertly ghost wrote the 2003 Hollywood film, The Recruit,
and ultimately inspired the Robert De Niro spook character
in the Barry Levinson satire, Wag the Dog.
He was also a fixture on the set of TV's Alias,
which coincidentally debuted in September of 2001.
In the real world, the CIA serves as our country's
first line of defense in the ongoing war
against international terrorism.
CIA's mission is clear and direct,
safeguard America and its people.
Wow, a woman in a video?
That is so woke.
Speaking of TV, we could probably do an entire episode
just on how television shows treat law enforcement.
Law & Order franchise creator Dick Wolf famously
has a close relationship with the NYPD,
especially after years of employing officers as consultants
on his many cop shows.
He's fairly outspoken about which side
of the defund the police argument his shows come down on.
In 2002, Wolf boasted to the Houston Chronicle,
"'Before Law and Order came along,
"'it was unthinkable to have a prosecutor
"'as a lead character.
"'But as far as I'm concerned, they are doing God's work.'"
However, when asked about engaging
with the George Floyd protests
and the Black Lives Matter movement in 2020,
Wolf responded,
"'We have always adapted to current events
"'in a non-political way.
"'Prosecuting next to godliness.
"'Should police kill people?
"'Oh, we gotta stay non-political.
"'No comment.'"
In a recent interview
with the Hollywood Reporter's Top Five podcast,
SVU showrunner, Warren Light,
noted that Wolf won't allow any law and order shows to feature scenes
in which police officers do anything illegal.
Pretty fucked up.
Also not exactly woke of him to be named Dick Wolf.
Super problematic name, my guy.
We're getting into the behind the scenes bit here,
which is actually an entirely different can of worms.
Two cans even.
So let's take a break, maybe eat some more mushrooms
and then more show.
You love more show.
Hi, if there's one thing everyone definitely knows
about me, it's that I'm very big into playing sports.
That's why I invented my own sport called Putty Wacky.
That's where you whack slabs of putty at each other
until one of you passes out.
And as a sports star, I'm here to endorse Bombas
and their active wear designed to support
whatever fast paced putty related activity you are doing.
Their lightweight t-shirts are designed to feel cool
against your skin.
They have socks that both cushion and increase airflow
and their underwear is so breathable,
it's like you aren't even wearing them,
which is good since there's no underwear
allowed for putty wacky.
Oh, hey, and since they have a 100% happiness guarantee,
you can reach out to their team anytime
for returns, exchanges, or replacements.
So go to bombas.com slash more news
and use code more news for 20% off your first purchase.
That's B-O-M-B-A-S.com slash more news
and use code MORENEWS at checkout.
Be a sports star like me,
putty champion, Cody the Puds Johnston.
Oh man, I ate so much spinach mushroom strata
during that break.
Love eating mushrooms, also mescaline.
Okay, so we've talked about what's on the screen.
Now it's time to talk about what's happening
behind the scenes.
After all, if Hollywood was some kind of woke dungeon
blacklisting Republicans and jamming diversity
down our throats, studio boardrooms would probably look
like a Black Lives Matter rally
fucked in Against Me concert.
Diverse and wealthy liberals talking down
to the heartland of America and et cetera.
Except it turns out that despite a push for diversity
in front of the camera, behind that camera,
the film industry is rotten with honkies, swarms of them.
Roland Emmerich could make a disaster movie
about all of the white people.
That'd be fun.
I'd have to check with my people,
but I think I'm available to be in that.
Give me a call, Roland.
2020 research from UCLA confirmed that 92%
of TV network CEOs and chair people were white
and 68% were men.
Among senior executives, that total drops
to 84% white people and 60% men.
And sure, that's an improvement over UCLA's 2015 numbers
when 96% of senior TV executives were white
and 71% of them were guys.
But that's still pretty darn weak.
And the numbers are even worse in film.
The lack of behind the scenes diversity seeps
into creative suites and writers rooms as well.
People of color represented less than a quarter
of credited writers and directors on TV shows
in the 2018 to 2019 season.
Although it should be noted that this number is going up.
Meanwhile, only about 30% of TV shows are created by women.
On the film side, white male writers got an estimated 80%
of all film jobs in 2019,
while just 5.6% went to black writers.
According to numbers from a San Diego State University study,
just 11% of 2022's 100 top grossing American films
were directed by women.
That's down 1% from 2021.
Overall, women comprised just 24% of all directors,
writers, executive producers, editors,
and cinematographers on the year's 250 top grossing films,
also slightly down from 2021's numbers.
A similar survey from USC found that just 2.7%
of the top 100 highest grossing directors
were women of color in 2022.
If you look at the last 16 years collectively,
women of color made just 1.3%
of the big budget mainstream Hollywood films.
USC also found that films made by directors
from underrepresented communities
perform comparably on review sites
to films from their white guy counterparts.
It's not that these movies do worse at the box office
or find fewer fans.
These are good movies,
and yet we still see these people underrepresented.
And to be fair and handsome,
and have a lot of appeal to the 18 to 34 demo,
incremental changes have been happening,
but it's easy to see a small trend
and get lulled into the sense
that larger scale problems have been solved.
In some ways, despite its reputation
as a hotbed for radical progressivism,
Hollywood remains particularly resistant
to these kinds of changes.
It's an industry that's long been dominated by connections,
legacy, and of course nepotism,
which keeps power centralized and entrenched
even across generations.
Real woke stuff.
But it's not a nepo baby's thing, okay?
Tom Hanks made that clear.
It's a family business that still relies on hard work.
I mean, come on, do you think Chet Hanks
is only famous because of his dad?
Come on, just look at the natural charisma.
Big up, big up the whole island, massive.
It's your boy Chet and I,
coming straight from the Golden Globes, your words here.
Thanks, Chet.
Woke Hollywood darling, Chet Hanks,
who had a speaking role in the fourth Indiana Jones,
which I'm sure he worked really hard to get.
Anyway, not so great on the representation side of things,
but it doesn't stop there.
Remember that whole hashtag Me Too movement?
How time was apparently up for predators
in the entertainment industry.
Anyone check on how that went?
Because according to the New York Times,
Hollywood's business culture has already regressed back
to the pre Harvey Weinstein expose era.
Anecdotally, women working on Hollywood film and TV sets
report that not a whole lot has actually changed
in the day to day way.
Many who spoke anonymously with the Hollywood Reporter
last year alleged that either they or a female colleague
had been verbally or physically harassed
in the workplace within the last five years.
And most agreed that Hollywood's old guard
has not actually amended their behavior.
Reporting bad behavior to HR also remains an uncertain
and potentially dangerous remedy
due to the possibility of blowback from colleagues.
More than 70% of respondents to an October THR survey said
the culture of abuse, harassment, and misconduct
in Hollywood had improved somewhat,
but 69% still said they'd personally experienced it
in the last five years.
It's very clear by all accounts that the main concern
isn't stopping harassment, but looking like they stopped it.
Movie magic!
The studios even brought in a number of diversity
and inclusion experts in order to performatively
embrace Me Too.
Those experts would go on to tell the Hollywood Reporter
that they were largely used as a scapegoat or shield
to defend upper management from criticism.
Some complained about facing pushback
when they tried to institute meaningful changes
or being siloed in human resources departments
without access to primary decision makers.
Many discussed a sense of fatigue or frustration
at the inability to actually make the changes
they were hired to oversee.
That's funny, people always say that I look fatigued.
So, you know, if there's ever a film about this,
that might be a good project for someone like myself.
Just a thought, fatigued headshots available upon request.
Even the most immediate and visible impact of Me Too,
as in the removal of men credibly accused of assault
or sexual misconduct for major Hollywood productions
was never an actual certainty
or even particularly likely to happen.
You don't need an article to know that David O. Russell
has a police report against him
for molesting his 19 year old niece,
as well as a long history of abusing his actors.
If that name doesn't ring a bell,
maybe the star studded 2022 film, Amsterdam will,
a film that happened to be directed by David O. Russell.
The O stands for, oh my God,
why is this guy still allowed to make movies?
That film featured Margot Robbie,
who was also in the recent film Babylon,
which stars Brad Pitt,
a man currently accused of spousal abuse
by Angelina Jolie.
Roman Polanski and Woody Allen still making movies.
Jared Leto is by all accounts a pedophile cult leader
and he is still getting major acting work
and starring in the highest grossing film ever made.
And that's just assault and misconduct.
There are also the many canceled people
who seem to be doing just fine.
As I mentioned before, Mel Gibson is still getting work
and is slated to appear in the John Wick TV show.
J.K. Rowling is still getting her work adapted.
Alec Baldwin is currently on trial
for involuntary manslaughter due to his grotesque disinterest
in safety protocol that resulted in him shooting
and killing someone.
And he has nine films in production right now,
including the film that he shot someone making.
And this is all still just the film industry.
I haven't mentioned musicians or comedians,
but it's almost like a single hashtag wasn't enough
to solve the systemic problem
with a billion dollar industry run by rich white men.
I mean, don't get me wrong, it is a start,
but it's pretty wild that from this entire movement,
we were able to kind of just nail the one guy
and not much else.
Oh right, and the wubba dub guy too, I guess.
So, bah bah.
Speaking of hashtags, it's been eight years
since activist April Reign first coined the hashtag
OscarSoWhite in response to 2015's nomination
of a lineup of 20 all-white nominees
in the acting categories.
It actually happened again in 2016, twice in a row.
Double good job.
This campaign did lead to attempts to diversify
the Film Academy's voting membership
and has seemingly started to impact some of the results.
In 2019, a record seven black artists
took home awards on Oscar night.
But it's hard to deny that in 2023,
the Oscars are still pretty freaking light.
Of the 20 major acting nominees this year,
six went to People of Color
and three of those nominations are from a single film.
This year's Best Actor category is Five White Guys,
and Michelle Yeoh is the very first Asian woman
nominated for Best Actress since Merle Oberon's nod
for The Dark Angel in 1935.
She actually hid her Asian ancestry
in order to pursue an acting career at all.
So they're sometimes calling Yeo the first openly Asian
Best Actress nominee, how depressing that is.
And there's a whole lot more to say
about Asian representation specifically in Hollywood,
but it's probably best exemplified by the fact
that the first Asian ensemble cast to win the SAG Award
was presented by this guy.
It's Mark Wahlberg.
He did a hate crime against an Asian man.
Cancel culture, run a mock-eye, say.
In terms of best picture, extremely well-reviewed films
like The Woman King and Till were completely passed up,
but I guess, you know, they had to make room
for Avatar the Way of Water.
Look, nothing against James Cameron
and his super compelling story
about CGI people sinking a whaling boat,
but that film is not a best picture.
I'm sorry, James, please don't be mad.
You're a great director and those avatars are very fun
and I'd love to sit down and talk about
where I could fit into that world.
Like maybe there's a Navi who's really fatigued
about tail bonding with the soul tree or whatever.
Fatigued blue headshots available upon request.
See, what's important to note is that the reason films
like Till and The Woman King didn't get nominated
isn't because those films weren't as good.
Like objectively, that's not how the Oscars work.
Studio executives collectively choose which films of theirs
to campaign for and then spend a bunch of money
pushing for that nomination.
So while technically speaking, anyone can be nominated,
it's almost always the people who could afford
a big expensive ad campaign.
It's not a meritocracy and anyone pretending it is
very clearly has no idea what they're talking about.
Because of how this system works,
the nominations are basically handpicked by the executives.
That's why you might've heard about the controversy
around Andrea Riseborough's Best Actress nomination
and how some people wanted it taken away.
What was her big crime?
Doing her own grassroots nomination campaign.
In other words, it's so expected that nominations stem
from million dollar studio campaigns
that people were outraged the one time it didn't happen.
And that's the reason any of this matters.
While the Oscars aren't important to most people,
the nominations themselves serve as a bit of a microcosm
for the entire system.
They're essentially a list of the films
that the executives have deemed award worthy.
And so when people are saying that the Oscars are so white,
what they're saying is that the movie executives
are ignoring non-white artists.
And no matter how diverse films get,
that's kind of the root of the problem.
All of this can actually be put a lot more succinctly
by simply quoting the founder of the Academy
and former head of MGM, Louis B. Mayer.
I found that the best way to handle movie makers
was to hang medals all over them.
If I got them cups and awards,
they'd kill themselves to produce what I wanted.
That's why the Academy Award was created.
And going all the way back to the claim
from Tim Allen and Kelsey Grammer
about how conservatives are a minority in the film industry.
They technically aren't wrong,
but as noted by a professor of history at USC
who wrote a book entirely about Hollywood politics,
corporate Hollywood tends to be much more conservative
and Republican.
Corporate, as in executives.
It's the thing they always gloss over
when talking about the conservative minority in Hollywood,
which is that this minority just so happens
to be the people at the very top making the actual decisions.
NBC Universal's former CEO Steve Burke, Jerry Bruckheimer,
fucking Steven Mnuchin, who was both a successful producer
and Trump's treasury secretary.
It's why, despite this woke push for diversity on screen,
Hollywood remains mostly white dudes behind the screen.
That's why it's so fucking funny whenever some silly asshole proclaims that they're starting
their own conservative studio, unlike the other studios.
But yesterday there was a secret screening of the film and Hollywood conservatives came out,
some Hollywood conservative insiders came out, but they had to keep it on the down low. Funny,
when they did
those hit films on Reagan, on Bush, and on Trump, Hollywood, I don't remember these left-wing
insiders having to hide their faces or their identities. In the absence of conservative actors
and a perspective, do you think that's why Hollywood just can't seem to make a film that
has broad appeal in the United States anymore? Well, I think there's a myopic vision in Hollywood
that's speaking to a certain cultural Marxist agenda.
Thank you, Robert Davi,
actor from the Marxist woke Hollywood films,
Die Hard and The Expendables,
for answering the question as to why Hollywood
can't make a film with broad appeal anymore.
You know, because blockbusters
are doing really bad right now, my goodness.
Breitbart's hit film, My Son Hunter,
released as a retaliation against woke Hollywood,
had a screening that was attended
by multiple Hollywood bigwigs,
one of which has been a producer for Game of Thrones,
Moneyball, and at least one of the Bourne films.
But as they noted in that clip,
many of these people didn't wanna give their names because while Hollywood is absolutely run
by rich white conservatives,
they don't want it to seem that way
because the thing these ghouls complaining
about woke Hollywood almost get right
is that there is absolutely hypocrisy going on.
A-list actors are paid incredible amounts of money
to play dress up.
They're ridiculously fortunate and they know it
and they feel guilty about it.
That guilt must be assuaged.
And what better way to assuage it
than to speak up for the less fortunate?
No one should own guns, but they have private security.
Nobody should have an SUV,
but they are chauffeured around in Suburbans.
CO2 emissions are destroying the planet,
but they fly to Cannes or just across town
in their private jets.
That's from the first video I showed you,
courtesy of woke experts PragerU, not a university.
And while I'm not about to say that video
is in any way correct,
they're circling the same point here.
That while Hollywood loves to do performative wokeness,
it is in fact very rich, very white,
and very conservative behind the scenes.
Disney loves to push their first gay characters
appearing in recent films.
At various times, Disney has identified
between eight and 17 different individuals
as the company or a subdivision's
first openly gay character,
including Artie, the dressmaker from Cruella,
Fastos, the Eternal, Officer Spector from Onward,
Josh Gad's LeFou from the live action Beauty and the Beast,
and almost every time,
they're a background or side character
that can be easily trimmed for international releases.
In fact, whistleblowers from within Pixar
told Variety back in March of 2022
that Disney executives demand the studio cut
nearly every moment
of overtly gay affection from its films
so as to not scare away the straights.
Because at the end of the day, it's just about money
and pandering to whoever has that money.
If Republican values were popular, which they aren't,
but if they were, then that's what we would be seeing
on the screen.
So is Hollywood woke?
Not only is the answer no,
but also that Hollywood should actually be more woke
considering the pro-military, pro-cop, pro-gun,
pro-corporate messages they put out,
considering all the monsters still getting work,
the lack of diversity behind the scenes.
Well, in my opinion,
they need to crank that woke meter to 11.
That said, it's worth noting that even performative wokeness
is better than nothing at all.
I sort of glossed over this,
but we've absolutely seen that representation in film
matters, it matters to kids watching these movies,
finally seeing a hero with the same skin color as them.
It matters to LGBTQ people who might feel
a little more included by even the side characters
representing them.
It's something.
It's not much, but it's something.
And if Hollywood, an industry only concerned
about pandering to the most popular ideas,
actually finds itself leaning into progressive stories
and characters, well, at least that means
those ideas are popular.
They've been market tested and approved
by soulless money ghouls.
Neat, neat for us.
So there you have it, not woke and by extension, not broke,
which is weird because I have no money.
And as a Hollywood elite myself,
you'd think that I would, right?
The hell is that about?
Is there like a webpage where I register
and then they mail me a check?
If like Kevin Feige or whoever is watching,
can you shoot me an email about that?
Thank you, Kevin Feige.
Also, I do a great Groot voice if you,
I don't know, if you need a second actor for that.
Or like if Rian Johnson's watching,
you may know me for my old Looper sketch that you've seen.
You tweeted about it.
Rian, remember the sketch that you liked?
Well, Rian, maybe I could be one of the poker faces
or whatever.
I haven't seen it yet, but I have range is my point.
Please.
Please, I need a win.
I am Groot.
Ah!
Ah, Jafar, I'm Groot! Ah! Ah, Jafar, I'm Groot!
Ah!
Pretty good.
This is my impression of a hot dog.
I'm Groot.
Somebody Groot me.
Hi, I'm Groot.
Thanks for watching.
Make sure to like and subscribe the video
and to the channel.
Leave a comment that says whatever you want,
because you are in control.
We've got a patreon.com slash some more news.
We've got a podcast called even more news and this show,
some more news as a podcast called some more news where all the podcasts are
go where the podcasts are,
go to them and find us.
We'll be there.
Um, we got merch. Stuff us. We'll be there.
We got merch, stuffs on the merch and dice. And I'm Groot, you know?
I am.