Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

John Schneider Gets Choked Up About 'Woke Hollywood' Not Helping Him Make Movie About The Flag

John Schneider Gets Choked Up About 'Woke Hollywood' Not Helping Him Make Movie About The Flag
Newsmax

The 'Dukes of Hazzard' star says he and his wife had to finance their film 'To Die For' with their own money—and could "lose everything" if it flops.

Actor John Schneider—best known for playing Bo Duke on the hit 1970s television series The Dukes of Hazzard—was mocked after he complained that "woke Hollywood" did not help finance To Die For, his movie about a veteran "frustrated with the liberal left" and their disrespect for the American flag.

Speaking to Newsmax, Schneider said that he and his wife, filmmaker Alicia Allain, went "all in" on financing the project, noting that if it "doesn’t work, we lose everything.”


You can listen to Schneider's comments in the video below.

Schneider said:

"My gosh, they wouldn't spend any money to develop it. They wouldn't film it. They wouldn't distribute it."
"But my wife and I are fiercely and unapologetically independent so we make our own content and we also distribute our own content."
"So when you watch this movie or any movie that we've made or listen to any of the music, we—right now—we are all in. If this movie doesn't work, we lose everything."
"But we've always been there. If you're not all in, you're out."

Then, choking up at an image of the film's poster that shows the lead character hoisting up the American flag, Schneider praised his own creation, saying "he won't let that flag touch the ground."

The site of the choked-up Schneider had social media rolling their eyes and he was abruptly criticized.



To Die For's marketing campaign has emphasized the importance Schneider and other conservatives place on patriotism, and the film's protagonist—who is played by Schneider—is "ordered by the court to keep his distance from the local high school with the American flag on the back of his El Camino or face a fine and jail time."

Schneider says he and his wife made the movie "with a crew of under 10 people over the last 10 months because we had to" respond to what he calls the "madness" within the country. Schneider has high hopes for his own film, saying that all "great movements and reclamations begin with a single thought and a God-given means of expression."

More from Entertainment/celebrities

Conan O'Brien Announces He's Hosting 2025 Oscars: VIDEO
@TheAcademy/X

Conan O'Brien Hilariously Announces He'll Be Hosting The Oscars—And Fans Are Pumped

It's been a long time coming. America has been asking for it, and it's finally happening.

Conan O'Brien is hosting the Oscars for the first time!

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshot of Andy Beshear
CBS

Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear Gives Pitch Perfect Answer On Why He Vetoed Anti-Trans Bill

Kentucky Democratic Governor Andy Beshear gave a pitch-perfect answer on why he vetoed "one of the nastiest anti-LGBTQ+ bills that my state had ever seen" despite the fact that he was up for reelection in deep-red Kentucky.

Last year, Beshear vetoed Senate Bill 150, a bill that bans all gender-affirming care for transgender youth, saying at the time that the legislation "tears away the freedom of parents to make important and difficult medical decisions for their kids.”

Keep ReadingShow less
Donald Trump Jr.
Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images

Don Jr.'s Demand For What The Right Should Target Now That 'Woke Is Dead' Is Epic Self-Own

Donald Trump Jr. was widely mocked after he attempted to declare victory over "woke" ideology in a tweet over the weekend—only for his demand for what to "take out" next to fall flat on its face.

The irony was off the charts when the eldest Trump scion took to X, formerly Twitter, with the following message:

Keep ReadingShow less
Cat hiding under a blanket
Photo by Raduga 11 on Unsplash

People Who Hid Pets From A Landlord And Got Found Out Share Their Stories

Let's be honest: It's harder than ever before to find a rental arrangement that matches our needs, our budgets, and our tastes.

A place that checks all of our boxes might be too far out of our price range, and unfortunately, despite how much we might be spending on rent, we might not even really like the place personally.

Keep ReadingShow less
Maori lawmakers doing Haka
@whakaatamaori/TikTok

Video Of Māori Lawmakers Performing Haka To Protest Anti-Indigenous Bill Has Internet Cheering

New Zealand, like many places that were colonized, is going through a moment of political conflict with regards to indigenous rights. And some of the country's Māori lawmakers knew just how to handle it in a recent parliamentary session.

During discussions of proposed legislation—The Treaty Principles Bill—that critics say would significantly infringe on indigenous land and cultural rights, legislator Hana-Rawhiti Maipi-Clarke led her fellow lawmakers in a haka, a traditional Māori ceremonial dance.

Keep ReadingShow less