'They are a bunch of f***in' zeroes!' UFC's Dana White crushes media critics



UFC President Dana White ripped into the media and sideline critics in a rant during an interview with a popular podcast.

White made the comments on the "Bussin' with the Boys" podcast hosted by former NFL players Will Compton and Taylor Lewan.

"If the media tells you you've got something that's gonna fail, it's definitely gonna f***in' win!" said White.

"The media are the dumbest, know-nothin', do-nothin', never f***in' built nothin' motherf***ers on planet Earth. So when they say, 'It isn't gonna work,' you got a f***in' home run, man!" he added while the hosts laughed.

"You know what I mean? Jump in and grind. The media, these guys, think about who these people are. When you really think about the media, who are they? Where did they come from? Why does their opinion matter? What have they ever done? What have they ever created?” he asked rhetorically.

“What have they ever built? Who's ever depended on a paycheck from the media? Nobody," White concluded. "They are a bunch of f***in' zeroes that sit around and write stories about people who are actually doing s***.”

White faced some criticism from the right after he announced that the UFC was partnering with Bud Light after the company's transgender public relations disaster. He has since explained that the company does far more good for its U.S. workers and for veterans than the bad it might have done with the transgender marketing campaign.

"When you talk about being a sellout, I had multiple deals in front of me. So it's not like 'oh Bud Light showed up and they were the only option I had to get money.' Do you know how f***ing stupid that is?" he said in October.

"For Anheuser-Busch it was about values, core values for me," White explained. "Almost a billion dollars a year go to U.S. farmers for their crops, for their products; that is right up my alley, that's exactly who I am. 65,000 Americans are employed by Anheuser-Busch, and thousands of them are vets; right up my alley."

Here's the video of White's comments:

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Why Dana White & UFC’s Bud Light sponsorship is a VICTORY for America's culture war



It seems that Anheuser-Busch has finally figured out who its customer base is, and its pulling out all the stops to win it back.

The once-beloved beverage company has landed a six-year, $150 million partnership with the world’s premier mixed martial arts league — the UFC.

However, fans aren’t forgetting Bud Light’s recent celebration of trans activist Dylan Mulvaney and think Dana White might be selling out.

Jason Whitlock believes that couldn’t be farther from the truth.

“I don’t think Dana White and the UFC sold out. Bud Light did. Anheuser- Busch did,” Whitlock says, adding, “forking over more than $100 million in advertising dollars to America’s most masculine sports — that’s what victory looks like in the gender and sexuality culture war.”

Modelo had replaced Bud Light as the beer sponsor of White’s mixed martial arts league, but Bud Light gave the league an offer the UFC couldn’t refuse. According to a source familiar with the deal, Bud Light doubled the amount Modelo had been paying.

“We forced the diversity, equity, and inclusion Gods to wave a white flag of surrender inside a major corporation,” Whitlock says. “We pillaged Bud Light’s marketing department. Dylan Mulvaney’s favorite beer brand capitulated, and it did so rather quickly.”

Whitlock notes that the partnership with Mulvaney began only seven months ago during March Madness.

“Outrage ensued, and then a boycott kicked off. Rocker Kid Rock filmed himself shooting cans of Bud Light with an AR-15 in his backyard. Sales of Bud Light dipped 30%. Anheuser-Busch stock plummeted. The company has been scrambling ever since to plug the gaping wound created by its desire to embrace the LGBTQIA plus alphabet mafia.”

While the company took massive hits after the Mulvaney partnership, it's not going away.

“I want them spending their money with businesses that reflect their customer base,” Whitlock says. “Dana White and UFC fans drink beer and support the kind of rugged masculinity that is under attack in America.”


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