The 2026 Grammy Awards proved once again that Hollywood can't help itself when it comes to turning entertainment into a platform for woke propaganda. Instead of celebrating musical talent, viewers were subjected to the same tired political lectures from celebrities like Bad Bunny and Billie Eilish, who apparently think their Grammy wins make them qualified to be political pundits.
Film critic Christian Toto didn't mince words when discussing the pathetic display on BlazeTV's "Stu Does America." "The pack mentality is strong," Toto explained. "The rhetoric is pretty familiar. It's often ugly. It's often ill-informed."
And he's absolutely right. These overpaid entertainers continue to push the same recycled talking points that Americans decisively rejected in the 2024 election when they chose Trump's America First agenda over the left's divisive identity politics.
Hollywood Elites Out of Touch With Reality
What's particularly galling is how these Grammy winners live in their ivory towers, completely disconnected from the struggles of everyday Americans who are dealing with the aftermath of four years of Biden's failed policies. While working families were crushed by inflation and open borders, these celebrities were counting their millions and preparing their next virtue-signaling speech.
"For a while there, these award shows were political. There were a lot of lectures, a lot of woke asides," Toto noted, highlighting how the entertainment industry has weaponized what should be celebrations of artistic achievement.
The American people are sick and tired of being lectured by entertainers who wouldn't last five minutes in the real world. That's exactly why President Trump won his second term - because patriots recognize the difference between authentic leadership and celebrity posturing.
While Bad Bunny and Billie Eilish waste airtime pushing failed liberal narratives, President Trump is busy delivering on his promises to secure our border, restore American energy dominance, and drain the swamp. The contrast couldn't be clearer.
Maybe it's time for these Grammy winners to stick to what they supposedly do best - making music - and leave the serious business of running America to the adults in the room.
