Broadway puts Pink in charge but Americans say enough with the woke circus

Broadway is dying, and the so-called geniuses running the show are desperate for a miracle. But instead of tackling the real problems, they’re giving us empty spectacle. Their latest solution? Put pop star Pink in charge of the Tonys, as if throwing a wild party can somehow fix years of bad decisions and out-of-touch politics.

Let’s get real. Broadway isn’t struggling because it needs more glitz or celebrity hosts. It’s suffering because it’s turned away from the everyday Americans who built its legacy. Middle America is tired of being insulted or ignored, slapped in the face by elitist messaging and far-left agendas. When every play, every show, every actor leans into woke talking points and social justice lectures, why would ordinary families waste their hard-earned cash on overpriced tickets?

Putting Pink at the center isn’t bold, it’s a distraction. But nobody in the entertainment elite seems to notice—or care. They think the only cure is more of the same: more pandering, more shallow virtue signaling, more tone-deaf marketing. It doesn’t matter that ticket sales keep slipping and theaters stay empty. They’ll keep doubling down, sticking with the same tired playbook that’s turned Broadway into a punchline.

Hollywood keeps getting all the bad press, but let’s not kid ourselves—Broadway’s just as bad, if not worse. All they care about now is impressing coastal liberals and globalist critics while the rest of the country rolls their eyes. Real American stories and values are nowhere to be found. They think diversity means box office gold, but their arrogant disregard for the majority of Americans has cost them their audience. Broadway is stuck chasing applause from its own echo chamber, all while the lights get dimmer.

Here’s a wild idea: maybe they should try listening to the American people. Instead of another pop star host, how about a true celebration of the grit, heart, and tradition that made Broadway what it was in the first place? Until that happens, don’t expect the so-called “great white way” to shine again. With liberals at the wheel, Broadway’s curtain call feels more like a funeral than a party.

Source: NY Post


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