Woke Hollywood in 'crisis' as they lose 20 percent of Moviegoers

The term 'Go Woke, Go Broke,' has proved itself to be a true statement in recent years. It began with Bud Light and the Dylan Mulvaney situation, which saw their sales plummet. Target has also seen dips in sales after prmising 'gender neutral' swimsuit sections for children. The efforts to appease the idiotic masses, mostly influenced by elitist Hollywood actos, has only backfired on these companies.

Well now, the Hollywood Hills are even feeling the pains of the term. Since the start of the pandemic, and ultimately President Biden's woke term, there has been a 20 percent dip in Moviegoers.

Breitbart's Warner Todd Huston says people have been turned off by jamming liberal ideologies into bad remakes of classic films.

"People are tired of the remakes that completely reimagine the thing that made whatever it was famous," he says.

But going woke is not the only problem. Another issue is the large move to streaming, and movies going straight to platforms, instead of theatres.

"So many people now expect to see what they want to see at home...they reserve going out to films for something they think is really special or exciting," he says.

The year 2023 brought forth some wildly popular movies, such as Barbie, Oppenheimer, and others.

But in ranking them all, the top 10 movies of the year were more traditional classic, rather than the woke nonsense that comes from Hollywood.

"The top ten are all traditionally styled...Barbie may have been a bit more woke, but it was at least its own property," he says. "It was its own thing, not a reimagining of an old property."

Ranked inside that top ten was Sound of Freedom, which Hollywood all but banished. However, it made more money by the end of the year than Taylor Swift's film.

So as Hollywood continues its slide down the slope, what happens next?

"I think we see, instead of Hollywood saving itself...is new studios coming out doing things people want to see...with more small films coming out," he says.

In addition, Todd Huston says the product, thanks to streaming, has become so disseminated, that there is no real value in movies anymore.

Photo: hapabapa / iStock Editorial / Getty Images


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