Entertainment
The Ruminants Chew Some Serious Cud
Tonight (Tuesday) one of Southern Alberta’s most enduring bands comes to Bo’s when THE RUMINANTS hit the stage. Original, eclectic and a bit unpredictable is all I can say. If you like Tom Waits, Waylon Jennings, Merle, Surf, Grunge, these guys may be a fit. The Ruminants features Michael Platt, you know him from the Calgary Sun. He plays bass and guitar, writes, sings, and has a vibe that makes going out to a bar to see live music worth doing…

Platt writes songs about the old west, and has a love of Japanese guitars and German motorcycles. You should come and meet him at Bo’s Tuesday night. Another key piece of this night is Todd Maduke, raised in Central Alberta, living in Calgary for a few decades. If you like some southern Alberta dust in your Rye, or some Zane Grey in your Deadwood, or some Surf in your Yoakum, then this might be good fit.



Boots & The Hoots Pinecone Opry. Check it out Tonight at Bo’s.
Censorship Industrial Complex
The FCC Should Let Jimmy Kimmel Be
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Business
Disney scrambles as young men reject DEI-filled franchises
Quick Hit:
A new op-ed argues Disney’s progressive push has driven away the very audience its biggest franchises should naturally attract: young men. Writer Zachary Faria says the company is now scrambling to undo the damage caused by years of prioritizing “diversity, equity, and inclusion” over storytelling.
Key Details:
- Zachary Faria of the Washington Examiner writes that Disney has made its blockbuster franchises “toxic to young men” through DEI-driven changes.
- Faria cites examples across Marvel, Star Wars, and Indiana Jones where traditional heroes were replaced, demeaned, or sidelined in favor of “ideological propaganda.”
- He argues Disney has “no one to blame but itself” for alienating its male audience and is now considering original films to try to win them back.
Diving Deeper:
In a blistering critique published in the Washington Examiner, columnist Zachary Faria argues Disney’s embrace of progressive politics has caused the company to alienate one of its most natural audiences: young men between the ages of 13 and 28. “Disney’s progressive ideology has alienated young men. The company now recognizes that its own franchises are toxic to that audience,” Faria wrote.
Disney executives are reportedly brainstorming ways to bring young men back to theaters, despite owning some of the most male-oriented franchises in modern history. “You would think that this wouldn’t be very difficult: Disney owns Marvel, Star Wars, and Indiana Jones, among other franchises that should all naturally appeal to a younger, male audience,” Faria observed.
Instead, he says the company has used those franchises as vehicles for divisive politics. “Marvel went from being defined by Iron Man, Captain America, and Thor to being defined by mediocre Disney+ series mired in DEI propaganda,” Faria noted. He pointed specifically to the Iron Heart series, where “a young black girl (who is also a criminal) [becomes] the new Iron Man, as she dismisses her predecessor as being nothing more than a privileged rich man.”
The same pattern, he argues, can be seen in Lucasfilm and Indiana Jones. Harrison Ford’s iconic hero was supplanted by a female co-star “who the latest bomb of a film positions as morally superior to him.” Meanwhile, The Acolyte turned the Jedi into villains while portraying “the heroic lesbian space witch cult at the heart of the movie.”
For Faria, this strategy is backfiring. “With those brand names in its pocket, Disney should have been playing on easy mode when it came to winning over young male viewers. Instead, Disney has made those franchises so toxic that it is reportedly looking for original film concepts to win over young men,” he wrote. He added that it is now “easier to come up with a completely original story that will appeal to young men than it is to appeal to them with a Star Wars film.”
Faria concluded with a sharp comparison between the entertainment giant and the political left: “Disney, much like the Democratic Party, has embraced an ideology that belittles and ostracizes young men, and is now facing the reality that young men no longer want anything to do with its brand. Disney is trying to figure out how to win over the people it purposefully alienated over the last several years, and it has no one to blame but itself.”
“Disney+ Day” by Anthony Quintano licensed under (CC BY-SA 2.0)
-
Business1 day agoTrans Mountain executive says it’s time to fix the system, expand access, and think like a nation builder
-
Economy2 days agoIn his own words: Stunning Climate Change pivot from Bill Gates. Poverty and disease should be top concern.
-
International1 day agoBiden’s Autopen Orders declared “null and void”
-
Addictions2 days agoThe Shaky Science Behind Harm Reduction and Pediatric Gender Medicine
-
Business2 days agoClean energy transition price tag over $150 billion and climbing, with very little to show for it
-
MAiD1 day agoStudy promotes liver transplants from Canadian euthanasia victims
-
Internet1 day agoMusk launches Grokipedia to break Wikipedia’s information monopoly
-
Business1 day agoCanada has given $109 million to Communist China for ‘sustainable development’ since 2015







