Exit Stage Left: The Ego And Amnesia Of George Clooney

Help us, George Clooney … you’re our only hope!”

No one actually shared that plea with the Oscar-winner, but he’s been assuming someone did for a while. Over the course of four decades, the 63-year-old went from the mulleted handyman on “The Facts of Life” to an award-winning actor, director and film producer.

Clooney has every right and intention of using his celebrity gravitas. That’s despite the 2024 election proving voters no longer hold stars in high regard. At least at the ballot box.

Plenty of people listened to Clooney last summer, a time when his unofficial Save America tour kicked off. He took to the pages of The New York Times to call for President Joe Biden to end his rematch against President Donald Trump.

Clooney’s Op/Ed, and his choice of platform, rocked the Democratic establishment. Clooney shared how the Biden he once knew was no more, and that it was time for a younger Democrat to take the fight to Trump.

It’s devastating to say it, but the Joe Biden I was with three weeks ago at the fund-raiser was not the Joe ‘big F-ing deal‘ Biden of 2010. He wasn’t even the Joe Biden of 2020. He was the same man we all witnessed at the debate.

Breaking News from 2021, right? Except it came on the heels of Biden’s disastrous June 27 presidential debate and endless videos revealing the leader’s rickety health.

When Biden eventually stepped aside ( maybe pushed?), Clooney looked like a Democratic soothsayer.

As a result, the star’s ego grew three sizes. and we’re now getting a good dose of it  during Clooney’s “Good Night, and Good Luck” press tour.

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - FEBRUARY 6: Signage during a press event announcing the cast of the play based on the 2005 film "Good Night, And Good Luck" on Broadway at The Wintergarden Theatre on February 6, 2025 in New York City. (Photo by Bruce Glikas/WireImage)

Bruce Glikas/WireImage

The actor brought his 2005 film of the same name to the Great White Way earlier this month. His never-ending publicity for the show, along with the production itself, has given Clooney even more opportunities to lecture reg’lar Americans on The Way Things Ought to Be.

Let’s start with the show, a love letter to journalist Edward R. Murrow during his ‘50s-era battles with Sen. Joseph McCarthy. Their clashes mattered then, and now, and the play (and film) justly honor that.

Except Clooney backloads the production with a clip brigade that touches on everything from the silly to the surreal. It’s meant to remind us why the Fourth Estate matters, even though the clips include video of Elon Musk raising his arm in a manner that some of the far-Left dubbed Nazi-adjacent.

A real journalist wouldn’t suggest the billionaire’s awkward gesture was anything but an awkward hand gesture. Nor would he use that clip as an example of something noteworthy in modern times.

A better example? A shot of a burning Tesla?

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - APRIL 03: George Clooney celebrates on stage with cast during curtain call for "Good Night, And Good Luck" Broadway Opening Night at Winter Garden Theatre on April 03, 2025 in New York City. (Photo by Valerie Terranova/WireImage)

Valerie Terranova/WireImage

Clooney has used every media interview to remind us why journalism matters now – more than ever – in the era of Trump.

Here he is genuflecting to the Fourth Estate:

It’s a subject matter that is very close to our hearts, which is what [the press] does. Telling the truth and holding truth to power. It’s a play we’re very excited to do.

He wagged his perfectly manicured finger at us anew during a chat with CBS about the Broadway show. Once again, he defended modern journalists:

Governments don’t like the freedom of the press. They never have,” he said. “And that goes for whether you are a conservative or a liberal or whatever side you’re on. They don’t like the press.

He played the same note during a chat with the far-Left “Late Show” on CBS:

We have had this issue where power, kind of, hates the fourth estate. They hate journalism and my father’s an anchorman and news man and we’ve always believed in the idea of when the other three estates: the judiciary branch and the executive branch, when they all fail you, you need that fourth estate, right.

Screenshot: YouTube/The Late Show with Stephen Colbert. George Clooney.

Screenshot: YouTube/The Late Show with Stephen Colbert. George Clooney.

He’s right. So where was it during the last four years? Not only did brave, truth-telling journalists ignore President Biden’s mental decline, some actively covered it up. Remember the brief “cheap fakes” era of media damage control?

Biden’s mental decline was like his son’s missing laptop. Nothing to see here. Move along.

That’s journalism at its worst, and Clooney was part of that cover-up. Clooney palled around with President Biden during a June 2024 fundraiser, something he alluded to in that New York Times open letter. He saw Biden’s sorry state and said nothing for weeks until Biden’s poll numbers sank too low to ignore.

Is that what the son of a truth-telling journalist would do? Of course not.

Yet here he was thumping his chest about his play, the state of modern journalism, and his role in boosting both as if he had done nothing wrong.

It took a member of the “new media” to set Clooney straight about his cover-up.

“That’s not journalism, George. That’s cowardice, followed by naked partisanship,” said Megyn Kelly on her self-titled podcast about his actions.

Clooney remains both handsome and charismatic, and he effortlessly embraced his first major role on Broadway. That’s not easy. He might try putting his partisan blinders on the shelf the next time he waxes philosophical on journalism.

We’ve seen the very worst of it over the past decade, and any attempt to suggest otherwise is just theater.

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Christian Toto is an award-winning journalist, movie critic and editor of HollywoodInToto.com. He previously served as associate editor with Breitbart News’ Big Hollywood. Follow him at HollywoodInToto.com.

The views expressed in this piece are those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of The Daily Wire.

These Leftist World Leaders Saw A Surge In Support After Trump Took Office

The approval of leftist leaders in Canada, Australia, and the United Kingdom has surged since President Donald Trump took office in January and began implementing his economic and foreign policy agendas.

The Wall Street Journal reported on Thursday that the reaction to the beginning of Trump’s second administration has given new life to liberal leaders who previously looked destined for defeat in upcoming elections. Trump’s massive tariffs imposed on nearly every country in the world are the top issue that appears to be driving support for leftist leaders.

The biggest swing following Trump’s inauguration came in Canada, where the ruling Liberal Party appeared dead in the water until Trump imposed a tariff on Canadian goods and suggested making Canada the 51st state.

Trump’s policies and attitude toward Canada have appeared to turn the upcoming prime minister election on its head — shifting from a likely flip to the Conservative Party to potentially remaining in the hands of the Liberal Party and leftist Prime Minister Mark Carney. The Conservatives, led by Pierre Poilievre, were ahead of the Liberals by more than 20 points in the polls, but now the Liberals lead by around 4 points, according to the WSJ. Poilievre and his Conservative Party hope to gain back support among Canadians, who will go to the polls on Monday.

In Australia, which is holding elections on May 3, Left-leaning Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is now ahead in the polls by more than 10 points after trailing his conservative opponent, Peter Dutton, by six points in January. The jump in support for Albanese coincides with Australians losing trust in the U.S. government, according to polling results from the Lowy Institute. The think tank found that only 36% of Australians have any level of trust in the United States to act responsibly, the WSJ reported. That was down from 56% last year.

The United Kingdom’s Left-leaning Labour Party is still struggling with its approval rating, sitting at just 29%, but that’s an 8-point increase from February. The upward trend in approval for the British Labour Party followed Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s meeting with Trump at the White House in late February to discuss tariffs and the war in Ukraine. Starmer has vowed to “only strike a [trade] deal” with Trump “if it’s in the national interest.” Earlier this month, an Ipsos poll showed a 17-point drop in the number of Britons who agreed that the United Kingdom has a “special relationship” with the United States, down to 30%.

Conservative leaders in Canada and Australia are trying to navigate Trump’s policies as they seek to regain support ahead of their elections. Poilievre, a popular figure on the Canadian Right, has pushed “Canada First” campaign messaging, similar to Trump’s “America First” slogan. The Canadian parliamentarian has also amassed a large following among Canadian and some American conservatives for his viral critiques of the legacy media and former Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

Despite his similarities to Trump, Poilievre has been careful to differentiate himself from the U.S. president and has strongly opposed Trump’s tariffs that are now affecting the Canadian economy, calling Trump’s move “historic mistreatment of Canada.” Poilievre’s strategy is showing signs of success, as the Conservative Party has regained some ground on the Liberals, according to a CTV News-Globe and Mail-Nanos poll released earlier this week. According to the survey, Conservatives have narrowed the gap from 5.6 points to 3.6 points.

Dutton, the Australian conservative candidate, has pushed policies similar to those implemented by Trump, such as seeking to radically cut government spending. Dutton, however, has called Trump comparisons a “sledge” used to attack him, adding that “the government doesn’t have a good story to tell.”

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