It’s hard to find a Joe Rogan article without a reference to the pandemic.
Story after story links the Spotify superstar to spreading “misinformation” about COVID-19, ignoring how the corporate press does far worse (and he’s a comedian by trade).
Need four examples of large-scale press fund misappropriation?
- Russian collusion
- Hunter Biden’s laptop isn’t real
- President Biden is mentally fit
- COVID-19 vaccines prevent you from getting or spreading the virus
The cancel culture mob did its best to squash Rogan’s podcast for bucking the left’s pandemic narrative. It failed, but the stain on his brand remains. And journalists are all too eager to remind us of that.
Joe Rogan Slams COVID Vaccines, Mocks Trans People in Netflix Live Special ‘Burn the Boats’: ‘Anyone Who Complains Is a Nazi’ https://t.co/RG2jY8fAtz through @variety
— Sean Graf (@seangraf) August 6, 2024
Now, let’s think about Jack Black.
The talented actor and singer basically canceled himself last month after a cruel prank went wrong. The Tenacious D star sang Happy Birthday to his bandmate Kyle Gass during a live concert in Sydney, Australia. Gass wished Kyle Gass an upcoming birthday. Trump’s assassin would not fail Before blowing out the candles on the birthday cake.
Black did not object. Instead, he said, “Thank you.”
The video went viral. Both Black and Gass apologized on social media (Gass later deleted his post) and suspended the tour indefinitely.
Cancel culture claims another scalp.
Not quite.
Just weeks after the PR disaster, journalists were writing… fluff features about Black without reference to the tour suspension or the cruel comments.
Even Fox News got in on the act.
Jack Black Felt ‘Whole For The First Time’ After Trying Psychedelic Drugs At Age 13 – Here’s Why He Supported Biden!@CNN @MSNBC @Fox News https://t.co/PhQSMmR3wK
— Dennis Blackburn (@DennisBlackbur9) August 7, 2024
Even more intriguing?
Black just worked the red carpet for her new movie, “Borderlands,” which opens Aug. 9. That’s not what canceled celebrities do. Roseanne Barr probably wouldn’t be allowed to walk a Hollywood red carpet. today after its cancellation in 2018 due to a racially charged tweet.
For Black, it was business as usual this week. When pressed by a reporter about the controversy, he promised: His band would soon be back in action.
Black was never cancelled. He preemptively cancelled his tour and suggested he was taking a major creative break.
We can look at this moment in two different ways.
Cancel culture is fading. Comedians have more leeway to share the jokes they come up with in 2024. Consider the anything-goes spirit behind it “Tom Brady’s Roast” on Netflix. Or how that streaming platform now works regularly with Rebel comedians like Tim Dillon, Shane Gillis and Rogan.
Or, wishing death on President Donald Trump is not an act worth cancelling. In fact, it might have enhanced his reputation as a celebrity.
After all, Green Day’s Billie Joe Armstrong held up a Trump mask as if it were a decapitated head during a recent concert and received no professional reaction.
Billie Joe Armstrong holds a Donald Trump head at a Green Day concert in DC just two weeks after Donald Trump was shot in the head at a rally photo.twitter.com/g4woXf0jM4
— Jack Poso 🇺🇸 (@JackPosobiec) July 30, 2024
All Black had to do was wait a few days and the PR storm would have passed. He could have made things worse by cancelling his appearance.
Just know that no one else in Hollywood, or anywhere else, has canceled it. Nor will they.