Albuquerque Journal

Meryl Streep's tirade exposes elitism

- Columnist

Meryl Streep has played many roles in her long career and holds the record for the most Academy Award nomination­s of any actor. Among her portrayals was British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher. At the Golden Globe Awards, Streep behaved as if she actually had been elected to high office, entitling her to mount a high horse.

In a sixminute diatribe, Streep slammed president-elect Donald Trump, urging journalist­s to hold him accountabl­e. Given the media’s poor job of holding the current president accountabl­e, Streep’s call to arms seems like an invitation to a one-way street. Accountabi­lity is one thing. Extreme bias is quite another and mainstream media has been nothing if not biased against Donald Trump, most of his cabinet nominees and family members.

I stopped going to movies years ago because I grew tired of their political agendas, the profanity, the sex scenes and blasphemie­s. As a member of the Screen Actors Guild and the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists, I am sent DVDs of the Oscar-nominated films, which I can watch at home, if any interest me.

The first one I received this year was “Manchester by the Sea.” After counting more than a dozen uses of the f-word in the first 15 minutes, I ejected it from my DVD player. Screenwrit­ers actually think average people talk like this.

The Golden Globes, like the Oscars, are full of the selfaware (no wonder they worship President Obama, perhaps the most self-aware president in history). They’re happy to mock the values of “fly-over country,” even as they hope people they condescend­ingly view as “hicks” and worse, Republican­s, will buy tickets to see their films.

These elitists arrive at ceremonies at which people of like mind give each other awards for being like-minded. Many hang out with left-wing politician­s, who also live in their own fantasy world, as out of touch with real Americans as they are.

These overrated actors, who are shadows compared to Hollywood’s Golden Age, seemingly believe they set the agenda for the nation.

These actors produce little of lasting value. The A-listers among them attend White House functions — mostly during Democratic administra­tions — and get so upset at the prospect of a Republican victory that they threaten to leave the country should the Republican win. Sadly, they never leave.

The arrogance, superiorit­y and hypocrisy of these overrated people is astounding. Many campaign against guns while enjoying the protection of armed security guards.

There is a difference between a celebrity and a star. If you’re not old enough to know what real stars looked like, I again refer you to Hollywood’s Golden Age, where actors kept their clothes on, didn’t swear or have sex on screen and held the attention of audiences by the superior quality of their work.

Many old films are watchable today. I doubt most of today’s films will be worth watching in 50 years. They aren’t now.

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CAL THOMAS

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