• I think people who have a media based existence have to be more mindful of this kind of thing, because, like it or not, appropriate or not, it can have very serious effects on their livelihoods.

      We all suffer a bit of this at work. There are things we avoid saying to our coworkers, bosses, customers and clients, etc. What is and isn’t okay to say changes based on the nature of our employment. I can’t tell my boss he’s a stupid sac of shit for mismanaging a product launch in spite of my recommendations. For Tenacious D, it very much can be shit like this.

      • Uhh, not touring as Tenacious D anymore means a lot less money for Jack Black.

        If he’s trying to save his movie career, it shows that he valued his career more than his friend.

        Black isn’t hurting for money, his net worth is reportedly $50 million, he’s been in tons of shit lately, and Tenacious D has been touring off and on for over a decade. He’s 54 years old, he could just retire entirely on this kind of money at that age.

        Weak excuse.

      • I can understand a minimum wage worker not risking their livelihood over expressing antifascist sentiment in the workplace, but that doesn’t apply to a well known multi-millionaire with a large global platform.

        He is saying loud and clear - his millions and his fame, only one of which he is at risk of losing over expressing his opinion (E: and even then, he’d get plenty of notoriety to replace it if he actually found some self respect), are more important to him than taking a stand against fascism.

    • it doesn’t suddenly become inappropriate

      downpunxx was not saying that it was inappropriate. They’re saying that the current political temperature is high, and as a public figure, Gass’s comment could put a target on Tenacious D as “woke liberals ruining America”. Right now, that’s a dangerous label to have if you aren’t anonymous on the internet, and doubly so if you were planning on spending a lot of time in front of audiences over the next few months. Even if the chance of a violent event only went up from 0.1% to 0.5%, canceling is just the smarter move. Why risk it?

    • I mentioned this to my partner and they were like

      “Was it in public?”

      Yea… during a show…

      “Think he might agree but this is for like… safety? Like, people know where they’re gonna be for the next couple months and might retaliate?”

      That thought never crossed my mind.