OpinionMedia Bias

Hollywood Media Sinks to New, Predictable Low

Variety trashes Chuck Norris for daring to do what Hollywood won't attempt today

The death of Chuck Norris spawned both humor and heartache.

Fans of the action star rushed to social media to mourn his loss while recalling some of the funniest memes tied to the “Walker, Texas Ranger” standout.

Humor can help us process grief, honor the dead and remember those who impacted our lives in a positive way.

This … was different. And not remotely funny.

Variety rushed out a think piece tied to Norris’ passing Friday at the age of 86. The article didn’t celebrate his impact on Hollywood, the legend that grew around him or his durability as an action hero.

Instead, the piece attacked Norris on two key fronts. He shared a “cop agenda,” and his pro-America movies equated to “dangerous propaganda.” The tortured headline says it all: “Chuck Norris Was a Great Action Star — but Politics May Overshadow His Legacy”

RELATED: YOUR ESSENTIAL GUIDE TO HOLLYWOOD MEDIA BIAS

Once again, an anti-American scribe attacks a star for making patriotic films. That’s something today’s Hollywood rarely, if ever, does.

Was Norris a brilliant athlete and top-shelf star? Yes. But there’s no denying that his roles were part of a body of work used to show American strength, might and the pernicious attraction of taking the law into one’s own hands — something that seems less fun in a year in which our country is funneling money into bombing Iran and ICE agents are acting like one-man militias.

You’ll never see a similar think piece tied to the late, truly great Rob Reiner. Imagine a Variety article saying how Reiner’s crazed political views might overshadow his legacy, published the day of his death, no less.

Reiner’s political views were, indeed, crazed. His Trump Derangement Syndrome lapped everyone save Rosie O’Donnell and Robert De Niro. It was embarrassing.

You simply don’t pen that piece the day of Reiner’s death. Nor do you suggest those views could or should diminish his contributions to the culture.

They can’t.

That rule didn’t apply to Norris, apparently. The actor/martial artist leaned to the Right in his personal life and loved his country. Those factors made him a target.

When a star is the poster boy for American exceptionalism and might, at what point does his legacy transition from escapism to dangerous propaganda?

It never does, Variety. It never does.

Thankfully, X users let the outlet have it.

Editor’s Note: It’s a brutal time to be an independent journalist, but it’s never been more necessary given the sorry state of the corporate press. If you’re enjoying Hollywood in Toto, I hope you’ll consider leaving a coin (or two) in our Tip Jar.

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