Candace Cameron Bure, too:Vrede too wrote: ↑Sun Jul 28, 2024 9:22 amOpps Junior, Elon, Butker and Tate are whiny, xtian, "Satanic panic" idiots.Don Jr. Slams ‘Satanic’ Olympics Opening: ‘Mom Was Olympian’
... According to the Olympic Committee, however, the blasphemy allegations were misplaced, explaining that the performance was an interpretation of the Greek God Dionysus that “makes us aware of the absurdity of violence between human beings.”
Candace Cameron Bure Sends a Bold Message About Paris Olympics Opening Ceremony
Why didn't their RW xtian god give them brains and thicker skin? More:
Hilary Duff's Husband Slams Candace Cameron Bure in TikTok Video
The only way this situation gets any more embarrassing is if Bruce Springsteen responds.
Candace Cameron Bure has not had a fun time on TikTok these last two weeks.
First, Jojo Siwa called the star out for being the "rudest" celebrity she has ever met. Now, Hilary Duff's husband (indie rocker Matthew Koma) has used the video sharing app against the Full House actress after she shared a video of her rocking out to Bruce Springsteen's Born In The U.S.A.
In the video, which was originally posted on July 4, Bure can be seen donning red, white, and blue everything. The star is decked out in a patriotic headband, a light-up star necklace, an American flag-printed shoelace belt, denim shorts, and a red shirt with "God Bless America" printed across the chest.
While her fashion choice is a bit questionable,
that's not the problem Koma had with the video posted by the Aurora Teagarden Mysteries actress.
"Yeah, the song you're playing? It's about veterans coming home from Vietnam and being treated like sh**. Yeah, it's not about, it's not the Fourth of July," Koma said very matter-of-fact before he ended the video with a sarcastic chuckle.
... However, Koma's response to Bure's video wasn't just an ordinary case of opinionated disagreement. While Koma surely roasted Bure to a crisp online, what he had to say is related to the argument fans of the original singer/songwriter have had to make for the past 38 years....
According to NPR, shortly after Born In The U.S.A. was released in 1984, then-President Ronald Regan referenced the New Jersey-born rocker and his latest hit in a campaign speech....
After a shout-out from the President, Springsteen's career was subsequently fast-tracked to legendary status. As the musician rose to mainstream stardom, he was tasked with establishing the correct interpretation of the song.
As the report states, Springsteen was no fan of the then-President's co-opted usage of the song and was quoted at a 1995 concert saying this: "After it came out, I read all over the place that nobody knew what it was about. I'm sure that everybody here tonight understood it. If not — if there were any misunderstandings out there — my mother thanks you, my father thanks you and my children thank you, because I've learned that that's where the money is."
... while you bank the residuals, again... "But the songwriter always gets another shot to get it right," he said before performing Born In The U.S.A.
By the looks of it, Mr. Springsteen, Bure just gave you yet another shot to once again set the record straight.