Trump appoints Hollywood special ambassadors: Voight, Gibson, Stallone

The aluminum era in Hollywood is coming. In a Truth Society post on Thursday, Donald Trump announced plans to reinvigorate Hollywood — which he believes has been in disarray over the past four years due to losing business to “foreign countries” — by appointing Jon Waugh It and Mel were "special ambassadors" Gibson and Sylvester Stallone.

"They will serve as my special envoys to make Hollywood, which has lost so much business over the past four years, bigger, better, and stronger than ever," Trump wrote. "These three are extremely talented. "

Voight, 86, received the National Medal of Arts from Trump in 2019. The actor has publicly supported the president-elect for years, even calling him "the greatest president since Abraham Lincoln" and supporting his claims that Joe Biden committed election fraud. "(This is) our greatest battle since the Civil War - the battle of good versus Satan, because these leftists are evil, they are corrupt, and they want to destroy this country," he said in 2020. What are the chances of him seeing A24 dystopian thriller civil war?

It took Gibson, 69, and Stallone, 78, longer to come around to Trump. In 2016, Gibson claimed she did not vote for him. Five years later, he went viral for his tribute to Trump at UFC 264 in Las Vegas. Last October, Gibson not only endorsed Trump but also claimed that Vice President Kamala Harris had the "IQ of a fence post." Conveniently, his first directorial film since 2016 is set to hit theaters next week.

Stallone, meanwhile, spoke of Trump in similar terms to Voight. During a speech at Mar-a-Lago in November, the actor called Trump "the second George Washington." He then took it a step further and compared him to Rocky Balboa.

Trump’s complaints about Hollywood may have something to do with how new-age directors portray him in movies. Last year, his attorneys sent a cease-and-desist letter to the film's producers. apprenticeIranian-Danish filmmaker Ali Abbasi's brutal biopic stars Sebastian Stan as Trump and Jeremy Strong as notorious Trump lawyer Roy Cohn.

"A fake and shitty movie about me called 'The Apprentice' (do they even have the right to use that name without approval?) that will hopefully 'bomb,'" Trump told Truth in October wrote on Social. "It was a cheap, slanderous, politically disgusting act of fighting..." Stan and Strong were both nominated for Golden Globes for their performances and will receive honors at the upcoming Screen Actors Guild Awards. Extra recognition.

Any return to Hollywood's golden age is in good hands - just not the hands of Voight, Gibson, Stallone or Trump.