Hollywood’s latest stunt proves just how far the entertainment industry has fallen. Actress Sydney Sweeney partnered with a soap company to sell bars infused with her used bathwater, and predictably, it sold out in seconds. This isn’t innovation—it’s a sad reflection of a culture obsessed with fame over decency. While hardworking Americans struggle with inflation, elites push garbage like this and laugh all the way to the bank.
The soap, priced at $8, vanished instantly, leaving fans empty-handed. Scalpers quickly listed it online for up to $2,000, preying on desperate buyers. This isn’t capitalism—it’s exploitation. While Hollywood cashes checks, ordinary folks get scammed. Liberals love to preach about fairness, but where’s the outrage here?
Greg Gutfeld nailed it on his Fox News show, mocking the absurdity of adults fighting over soap with an actress’ bathwater. “If I had soap, it’d have hair on it,” he joked. Finally, someone says what we’re all thinking. While the left glorifies celebrity worship, conservatives see through the nonsense. This isn’t comedy—it’s a wake-up call.
Sydney Sweeney’s career is built on hyper-sexualized roles, and now she’s monetizing her own objectification. Feminists should be outraged, but they’re silent. Instead of empowering women, Hollywood reduces them to bathwater salesmen. Conservatives value real dignity, not this cheap parlor trick.
Dr. Squatch, the soap company, claims this is “edgy marketing.” Translation: They’re exploiting gullible fans for profit. Imagine selling a product literally washed off a celebrity and calling it “self-care.” This isn’t creativity—it’s a sign of a society losing its moral compass.
While Sweeney’s soap flies off shelves, families can’t afford groceries. Priorities in this country are upside down. Liberals cheer $8 bathwater soap, but mock conservatives who fight for lower gas prices. It’s time to ask: Who really stands for the American worker?
The media fawns over this story, calling it “groundbreaking.” Groundbreaking for whom? Celebrities and corporations getting richer? Real groundbreaking work happens in factories, farms, and small businesses—not in Hollywood’s bubble.
Enough is enough. Conservatives must reject this garbage and focus on what matters: faith, family, and real achievement. Let Hollywood keep its bathwater. We’ll keep building a country worth fighting for.