It’s possible that Country Music Television, often known as CMT, has just joined the ranks of Bud Light. By chopping up the new Jason Aldean song video, they have most surely infuriated their followers, especially their devoted supporters. After turning their back on country music’s biggest singer, Jason Aldean, a once-lauded television station that formerly catered to patriotic Americans is feeling the heat as a result of their actions.
They included drag artists at their music video award event a few months ago, which offended many long-time CMT followers. Many of these viewers protested that they would never watch the network again after this incident. Now, as a gesture of deference to the elitists on the political left, they have removed “Try That in a Small Town,” which was a major smash for Jason Aldean. As a result, country music fans are giving them the door, maybe for forever.
The viewership of the station has dropped by more than 64 percent. Those that listen to country music are not concerned with this cancel cultural wokism. This was a bridge that was completely beyond our reach. They saw the Aldean song as patriotic, an ode to an America that is nearly extinct because to the influence of wokism and cancel culture.
Sandy Batt and Joe Barron, both longtime fans from Idaho, have had enough of the band. The brother and sister duo who have been sharing a shabby trailer on the outskirts of Nampa have decided to cancel their subscription to CMT.
for good. “We used to get drunk on Bud Light, turn up the Country Music Television, and have unnatural relations, but now these awakened liberals and millennials are ruining things for folks like us!” Batt whined, expressing her concern that the bond she shares with her brother will never be the same if they are unable to rely on huge amounts of drink and loud country music.
It is a really sad state of affairs in the United States that a brother and sister living in a low rent trailer park in Idaho have to reevaluate their relationship because the things that brought them together, simplistic racist music and low cost booze, are now seen as “woke” and “liberal” and their life choices really come into focus once these things stop clouding their minds. This is a really sad state of affairs in the United States. We are keeping the majority of Idaho in our thoughts and prayers, as well as rural Pennsylvania, the whole Midwest and South, and the most rural parts of Oregon. America, may God bless you.