Trump calls 'liberal Hollywood 'racist at the highest level' as a satirical film that depicts liberal elites hunting 'deplorables' for sport is set for release
- President Donald Trump went after Hollywood on Friday, calling the industry "racist" and "really terrible."
- Later in the day, Trump doubled down, calling "liberal Hollywood" racist "at the highest level" and "with great Anger and Hate!"
- "The movie coming out is made in order ... to inflame and cause chaos," he wrote on Twitter. "They create their own violence, and then try to blame others. They are the true Racists, and are very bad for our Country!"
- Trump was likely referring to "The Hunt," a satirical film from Universal Studios about liberal elites hunting "deplorables" from the rural US for sport.
- Universal Studios pulled TV and digital ads for the film after two mass shootings in Dayton, Ohio, and El Paso, Texas, roiled the country last weekend.
- Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.
President Donald Trump on Friday went after Hollywood, calling the industry "really terrible" and "racist."
"Hollywood — I don't call them elites, I think elites are people they
go after in many cases — Hollywood is really terrible," the president
said, speaking with reporters on the White House lawn as he prepared to
depart for his golf club in New Jersey.
"You talk about
racism, Hollywood is racist," he added. "What they're doing with the
kind of movies they're putting out is actually very dangerous for our
country. What Hollywood is doing is a tremendous disservice to our
country."
He again attacked "liberal Hollywood" on Twitter later in the day,
calling it "racist at the highest level" and "with great Anger and
Hate!"
"The movie coming out is made in order ... to
inflame and cause chaos," he added. "They create their own violence, and
then try to blame others. They are the true Racists, and are very bad
for our Country!"
Trump was likely referring to recent
controversy surrounding "The Hunt," a satirical film from Universal
Studios that depicts liberal elites hunting "deplorables" from the rural
US for sport. "Deplorables" is the term that Hillary Clinton, the 2016
Democratic presidential nominee, used to describe some Trump supporters
during the election.
Universal Studios pulled TV and
digital ads for the film after mass shootings in Dayton, Ohio, and El
Paso, Texas, roiled the country last weekend.
"Out of sensitivity to the attention on the country's recent shooting
tragedies, Universal Pictures and the filmmakers of 'The Hunt' have
temporarily paused its marketing campaign and are reviewing materials as
we move forward," a Universal Pictures representative told Fox News late Wednesday.
The movie has infuriated many in the conservative sphere, who say it
promotes violence against people with opposing political views.
Tim Young, a conservative political satirist who hosted a comedy
program on The Daily Caller, told Fox News he found it "remarkable that
the left blames Donald Trump's rhetoric for violence, then literally
spends millions to normalize the killing of people based on politics."
The president invited sharp scrutiny after last weekend's shootings,
especially after law-enforcement officials discovered that the suspect
in the El Paso shooting posted a racist manifesto online shortly before
the massacre that echoed much of Trump's incendiary rhetoric about
immigrants.
The El Paso and Dayton shootings also
shifted the spotlight back to the rising threat posed by right-wing
extremism and white nationalism.
The FBI has 850 open
domestic terrorism investigations. Of those, 40% involve racially
motivated violent extremism, and a majority of those cases involve white
nationalists, the bureau said. FBI Director Christopher Wray also told
Congress last month that the agency counted 100 domestic terrorism
arrests in the past nine months.
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