Woof.
Actor John Schneider in contrast Beyoncé to a canine marking its territory whereas speaking about her dive into nation music on conservative cable information channel One America News Network earlier this week.
The “Dukes of Hazzard” actor trashed the 32-time Grammy winner as he talked with OANN host Alison Steinberg about how Beyoncé’s followers pushed to get one in every of her new songs, “Texas Hold ’Em,” performed on a country music radio station in Oklahoma.
Attributing how nation music has modified over the years attributable to “a lot more crossover music and acts like Shania Twain and Carrie Underwood,” Steinberg then introduced up the backlash that KYKC 100.1 FM confronted for not taking part in Beyoncé’s new music.
“The lefties in the entertainment industry just won’t leave any area alone, right? They just have to seize control over every aspect, don’t they?” Steinberg requested.
Schneider insulted Beyoncé and different pop artists dabbling with nation music throughout an interview on One America News Network.
“They’ve got to make their mark, just like a dog in a dog walk park,” Schneider replied with a smug smile. “You know, every dog has to mark every tree, right?”
“So that’s what’s going on here. Shania and the other folks you talked about, what they did was they were in country music and they went out. That’s one thing,” the actor continued. “But people coming in to country music — because I know a little something about country music — they seem to think that it’s easy or it’s simple, or somehow it’s not as sophisticated as the music they sing otherwise.”
While Schneider, who has dabbled in nation music since his TV days and appeared on “The Masked Singer” final yr, made it clear he’s not a part of the Beyhive, loads of individuals have been listening to the “Renaissance” singer’s new tunes.
“Texas Hold ’Em,” which was launched alongside one other new monitor titled “16 Carriages” final weekend, landed a spot on Billboard’s Country Airplay chart final week, marking Beyoncé’s first time on the nation charts.