Mike's Minute: The celeb trend for the election is a bust
The Mike Hosking Breakfast - A podcast by Newstalk ZB - Wednesdays
One of the many things I have failed to truly understand about this election is just what is it they think Jennifer Anniston or Harrison Ford is going to do for your vote. The celebrity endorsement has been a mainstay of the Democrat's campaign – mainly because there are very few so called “famous people” in places like Hollywood that aren't liberals. She has not been short of choice. At some point I decided it started to look desperate. LeBron, Jon Bon Jovi over the weekend with a song, Bruce Springsteen is an old favourite, Lady Gaga, and of course if they manage to roll out Taylor Swift its reached peak endorsement. Or peak panic – one or the other. Swift has already endorsed, but it seems its better if you show up for a song. Jennifer Lopez showed up but didn’t sing, but she did manage to look sensationally earnest. My suggestion is this: celebs are a bust. They are not what they used to be. I love LeBron, I love what he is about, I love how good he is, and he can vote any way he wants, I’ll still love him. But he is never going to tell me how to vote, no matter which way I vote. Could he sway an impressionable 18 year old sports freak? Maybe. Maybe that’s why he’s out there. But a lot of them aren't of LeBron’s weightiness – a lot of them are as shallow as a puddle. That is modern celebrity. This isn't Carey Grant, Lucille Ball, or Shaun Connery; the days of mystery and intrigue. These are the days of TikTok, where these people are so omnipresent they could be our mail men, hence the star power is dimmed, the influence has faded. The idea that we can't think for ourselves is preposterous. If celebrities worked, this would be a land slide, and yet it isn't. It’s Trump and Hulk Hogan versus Harris and virtually the entire film and music industry. Somehow the Dems have missed the memo and if they lose, what does that say about the entire film and music industry? See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.