Hollywood’s obsession with woke messaging and lazy reboots has left everyday Americans rolling their eyes. Ben Shapiro recently ripped into Tinseltown’s empty talent pool, exposing how far the industry has fallen from telling great stories to pushing leftist propaganda. From recycled superhero flicks to celebrities more focused on politics than acting, it’s clear Hollywood hates its audience.
Shapiro blasted the lack of original ideas, pointing to endless sequels like Avatar 4 and another Superman reboot. Why waste millions on stories we’ve seen a dozen times? Meanwhile, real creativity gets smothered by studios terrified of offending liberal Twitter mobs. Remember when movies had guts instead of gender lectures?
A-list stars like Jennifer Lopez and Harry Styles symbolize Hollywood’s priorities—style over substance. These celebrities collect paychecks for lifeless performances while lecturing fans about “social justice.” Shapiro called out the hypocrisy: “They preach diversity while making the same boring films.” It’s all hashtags and no heart.
The industry’s push for “representation” often means slapping women and minorities into poorly written roles just to check boxes. Shapiro mocked recent flops where “strong female leads” rescue incompetent men—a tired trope that insults both genders. Americans want heroes, not ham-fisted politics.
While Hollywood grooms activists, Shapiro’s Daily Wire produces crowd-pleasers like Terror on the Prairie—raw stories about freedom and faith. These films prove you don’t need A-list snobs to make great entertainment. Why fund elites who despise you when patriots are building an alternative?
Even Tom Cruise’s latest Mission: Impossible couldn’t escape Shapiro’s critique. He called it “a marathon of absurd stunts with plot holes big enough to drive a tank through.” Fans aren’t dumb—they notice when films prioritize spectacle over storytelling. Hollywood thinks we’ll swallow anything if it’s shiny.
The backlash is growing. Normal Americans are canceling Netflix subscriptions and boycotting theaters. They’re tired of paying $15 to hear lectures from out-of-touch millionaires. Shapiro’s message resonates: “Stop giving these clowns your money.”
It’s time for a revolution. Real talent isn’t about blue hair or virtue signals—it’s about respecting the audience. Until Hollywood cleans house, conservatives will keep building their own entertainment empire. Let the coastal elites keep their dying industry. Middle America is moving on.