Tom Hanks Lashes Out: Blaming Trump Supporters for Hollywood’s Decline Post-Charlie Kirk Assassination

The assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk has ignited a firestorm of political rhetoric from Hollywood celebrities, most notably Tom Hanks, who is now engaging in a public act of “damage control” over his anti-Trump comments. The actor, reportedly losing “millions of fans,” delivered a bitter lecture, accusing supporters of the former president of “un-American” behavior and directly linking their boycott of Hollywood to the sensitive political climate following Kirk’s death.
Hanks’s Accusation: Hollywood as a Victim
Tom Hanks’s “long-winded lecture” is rooted in his frustration over the rapid loss of audience support for the entire film industry. He attempted to paint Hollywood as the victim of a politically motivated attack:
- Blame Shifting: Hanks claims that because of the “sensitive issues surrounding Mr. Kirk” and Donald Trump’s alleged “abusing” of the event, those in the film industry are being “attack[ed]” and ridiculed.
- “Un-American” Boycott: He stated that citizens “walking away from cinema and walking away from supporting the many actors o[ver]holding a political opinion is so unamerican as far as I’m concerned.”
- The Industry’s Innocence: Hanks outrageously claimed that the industry “never engaged in any sort of culture wars or political propaganda,” suggesting that the boycott claims themselves are political propaganda orchestrated by Trump supporters.
- The Appeal to the “Hardworking”: He appealed to sentiment by arguing that boycotting big names also “hurt[s] the many hardworking Americans that put these movies together”—a final attempt to leverage sympathy for the industry’s financial woes.
The Real Issue: Lecturing and Politicization
The speaker dismisses Hanks’s attempt to isolate the Charlie Kirk situation, arguing that it was merely the latest example of a long-term problem:
- The Core Reason: The speaker asserts that the main reason people are “tired and done with Hollywood” is the “constant lecturing” from wealthy actors and actresses like Hanks, Robert De Niro, and George Clooney, who presume to tell “regular, hardworking American citizens… how to live or what to believe in or what to say.”
- The Clooney Example: The politicalization is evident in actions like George Clooney’s engaging in political commercials that advised people to “essentially lie to their loved ones… on who they voted for.” This act is cited as a prime example of how far actors went to politicize their platforms.
- The Tainted Image: The actors’ rush to politicize the Kirk assassination and turn it into an anti-Trump messaging campaign “tainted the image of Hollywood” and “destroyed the illusion” of the actors, accelerating a major shift of audiences toward independent filmmakers and other forms of entertainment.
The consensus is that Hanks is “acting very bitter” over the fact that “reality is beginning to settle in”—the audience is done being lectured by Hollywood.