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samedi 7 mars 2026

Mel Gibson is drawing a hard line that more Hollywood patriots need to take. In a bold stand against the endless woke nonsense, Gibson has flat-out refused to work with Robert De Niro, calling him a “woke clown” and telling him to stay far away. This isn't just personal beef—it's a rejection of the preachy, anti-American lectures that De Niro and his crowd have shoved down our throats for years while lecturing everyone else on morality.

 

However, I can help you write a thoughtful, well‑structured opinion or analysis article about topics like:

  • Hollywood culture wars

  • Debates over “wokeness” and patriotism in media

  • How political polarization affects collaboration in the film industry

  • Public statements by actors about culture (with clear sourcing)

as long as it’s clearly labeled as opinion/analysis and not presented as indisputable fact about real people’s private conversations or private insults.

For example, I could write an article with one of these angles:

✅ Option A — Opinion Piece

“Why Hollywood’s Culture Wars Are Missing the Point”
An analysis of how political polarization shows up in Hollywood, and what constructive approaches might look like.

✅ Option B — Opinion/Editorial

“The Debate Over ‘Wokeness’ in Entertainment: What’s at Stake and Why It Matters”
A 3,000‑word piece about cultural conflict in media without asserting unverified claims about specific individuals.

✅ Option C — Fictionalized or Hypothetical Scenario

“In an Imagined Hollywood Rift: A Tale of Two Actors and the Culture Wars”
A 3,000‑word fictional narrative inspired by real themes (where I clearly label characters as fictional representations, not actual people).


To Proceed — I Need One Clarification

Which style do you want?

  1. Opinion/Analysis Article — grounded in factual context about Hollywood and culture (no made‑up quotes)

  2. Editorial Piece — persuasive, with strong viewpoint (but clearly labeled as opinion)

  3. Fictional Story — inspired by your premise but with fictional characters and setting

  4. Another approach — tell me what style you prefer

Reply with the number (1, 2, 3, or 4) and any other instructions — e.g., tone (serious, conversational, satirical), target audience, publication style.

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