'Top Gun: Maverick' actor Glen Powell moves far away from Hollywood so he doesn't have to 'live in the Matrix all the time'



Actor Glen Powell — who gained notoriety for his role as a talented, cocky pilot in "Top Gun: Maverick" and then fast-rising stardom opposite Sydney Sweeney in "Anyone but You" — is moving out of Hollywood after 15 years.

In fact, according to the Hollywood Reporter, Powell is already gone — to Texas. Specifically, Austin. There he will be closer to family and complete his college degree, the outlet said.

'He’s like, ‘Hollywood is the Matrix, man. You plug in and it’s all fake world.' He’s like, ‘Then I go to Austin, and I unplug. It’s all real. Those are my friends, that’s my family, my actions matter there.''

“It’s like I’ve earned the ability to go back to my family," Powell noted to the Reporter.

As with other actors in recent years, Powell has found Hollywood's appeal wanting and, on a deeper level, he also was having difficulty determining what was real and who was real in his life, the magazine said.

So, according to the Reporter, Powell took the advice of superstar actor Matthew McConaughey.

Photo by Rick Kern/Getty Images

“He’s like, ‘Hollywood is the Matrix, man. You plug in and it’s all fake world,’” Powell recalled to the outlet. “He’s like, ‘Then I go to Austin, and I unplug. It’s all real. Those are my friends, that’s my family, my actions matter there.’ And he’s right. If you’re here, you live in the Matrix all the time, there’s no separation of those worlds. And for me, especially as my parents get older and my niece and nephew are growing up, I want a separation of those worlds.”

The Reporter said Powell bought a house 30 minutes from his parents, adding that "some combination" of his mom and dad and his two sisters "visit every project that Powell’s on, no matter where in the world he is." The outlet added that they "also keep him out of his head, and they make everything more fun."

Powell's mother Cyndy — who once worked in the Reagan administration and has been an extra in nearly every movie her son has been in — told the Reporter, “I know we’re probably in his way sometimes, but you wouldn’t know it because he makes everyone feel loved and taken care of."

Tossing Tinseltown

As Blaze News readers no doubt know by now, a number of well-known thespians have ditched their Hollywood digs in recent years:

  • Earlier this month, it was revealed that actor Adrian Grenier said he departed Hollywood for a life in his own farming community in Texas after years of a "hedonistic" lifestyle.
  • Also in May, stuntman and "Jackass" star Steve-O said he's leaving Hollywood in favor of Tennessee, where there's more land, lower taxes — and he can have "full-blown gun parties."
  • "Rocky" icon Sylvester Stallone earlier this year announced he and his family were moving out of California, where they'd lived for decades, to Florida.
  • Last year actor Scott Baio also ditched California for Florida after 45 years. He stated the reasons bluntly: "Between the homeless defecating on the sidewalk, doing drugs on the sidewalk in the middle of the day, illegal aliens all over the place, laws mean nothing, crime is out of control, graffiti on everything, and all my tax dollars I don't know what they go for."
  • In 2022, Mark Wahlberg said he was moving from California to Nevada to "give my kids a better life" and because it "made a lot more sense for us."
  • Comedian and actor Rob Schneider explained why he moved out of California in 2022: "I really feel like I don’t want the Democratic Party trying to run my life. And there’s not one aspect of your life that they don’t want to interfere with."

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Matthew McConaughey calls for 'gun responsibility' not gun control, goes on to demand gun control



Academy Award-winning actor Matthew McConaughey attempted to appeal to both sides of the gun control debate this week by issuing a call for nationwide "gun responsibility" rather than gun control in an op-ed for USA Today. Yet, while not going nearly as far as Democratic lawmakers and anti-gun advocates would have liked him to, the celebrity and Uvalde, Texas native ended up pushing for the adoption of several unproven gun control measures to curb gun violence in the country.

What are the details?

McConaughey, like many Americans, was forced once again to weigh arguments in the national debate over firearms in response to a recent spate of mass shootings in Buffalo, Uvalde, and elsewhere. Particularly as a hometown kid from the site of a horrific elementary school massacre that left 19 children and three adults dead last month, the actor likely felt compelled to "do something," as Democrats in Washington routinely say.

He began his op-ed by acknowledging that "law-abiding Americans have a Second Amendment right, enshrined by our founders, to bear arms," but noted he also believes "we have a cultural obligation to take steps toward slowing down the senseless killing of our children." And while "the debate about gun control has delivered nothing but status quo," he suggested a new approach: "gun responsibility."

The actor acknowledged that a litany of other factors — such as the lack of mental health care, adequate school security, sensationalized media coverage, and the decay of American values — played major parts in manufacturing gun violence, and needed to be addressed. But without "the luxury of time," he argued, we need to focus our time and energy on adopting policies that will have an immediate effect on gun violence.

Such policies, he said, included requiring background checks for all gun purchases, implementing nationwide "red flag laws," raising the age limit for buying an "assault rifle" (no such thing) to 21, and instituting a waiting period before the purchase of such weapons.

Below is McConaughey's full list of proposals:

1. All gun purchases should require a background check. Eighty-eight percent of Americans support this, including a lot of responsible gun owning Texans. … I’ve met them. Roof, who killed nine people in a black church in South Carolina in 2015, got his pistol without a completed background check due to a legal technicality. The system failed. Gun control activists call this a loophole. I call it incompetence.

2. Unless you are in the military, you should be 21 years old to purchase an assault rifle. I’m not talking about 12-gauge shotguns or lever-action hunting rifles. I’m talking about the weapon of choice for mass murderers, AR-15s. The killer in my hometown of Uvalde purchased two AR-15s for his eighteenth birthday, just days before he killed 19 students and two teachers. He obeyed the law. Had the law been different, perhaps I wouldn’t be writing this today.

3. Red Flag Laws should be the law of the land. These measures, which are already in effect in 19 states and Washington, D.C., empower loved ones or law enforcement to petition courts to temporarily prevent individuals who may be a threat to themselves or others from purchasing or accessing firearms. These laws must respect due process, judicial review, and hold account individuals who may abuse such laws.

4. We need to institute a national waiting period for assault rifles. Individuals often purchase weapons in a fit of rage, harming themselves or others. Studies show that mandatory waiting periods reduced homicides by 17 percent. Gun suicides account for the majority of U.S. gun deaths. A waiting period to purchase an assault rifle is an acceptable sacrifice for responsible gun owners when it can prevent a mass shooting crime of passion or suicide.

He added that he understands that these policies will not solve all of the problems related to gun violence and mass shootings, but said if they can curb some, "they're worth it."

What else?

"There is a difference between control and responsibility," McConaughey argued. "The first is a mandate that can infringe on our right; the second is a duty that will preserve it. There is no constitutional barrier to gun responsibility. Keeping firearms out of the hands of dangerous people is not only the responsible thing to do, it is the best way to protect the Second Amendment. We can do both."

But many law-abiding, gun-owning Americans will likely see only blurred lines in his argument. The measures McConaughey advocates for look a lot like knee-jerk reactions frequently offered by progressives, regardless of his stated respect for the Second Amendment. Just as well, all have their own practica and constitutional pitfalls.

For example, waiting periods and age requirements sound like simple, easy solutions, but for what other rights enshrined in the Constitution are Americans required to wait before exercising? And what happens when 21-year-olds commit atrocities with guns after waiting to purchase their weapons. Will the ticker once again be moved?

Universal background checks are another popular proposal offered by gun control proponents. But it, too, can be situationally impractical, nearly unenforceable, and the most likely to be ignored by the very criminals it intends to stop.

Some argue red flag laws carry the same pitfalls. While it sounds easy enough to simply identify the unstable or irresponsible members of society that shouldn't be trusted with guns, the reality is often much more difficult to assess. The Uvalde shooter, 18-year-old Salvador Ramos, had displayed bizarre behavior that resulted in him being a societal outcast but none of it rose to the level of criminal behavior.

Anything else?

In an interview with CNN's Dana Bash last month, Republican Rep. Dan Crenshaw (Texas) provided some necessary clarity on a number of the proposals raised by McConaughey. He called the so-called solutions bad policies since they likely would primarily serve to infringe the rights of millions of law-abiding citizens while doing comparatively little to stop mass shootings.

"It's an outcome problem," Crenshaw told Bask. "I don't think [these proposals] would have the outcome people think they would have."

Crenshaw noted that people often have misconceptions about universal background checks, which really mean that background checks would be required for private gun transactions. Background checks are already required by law for all gun transactions between a party and a licensed firearms dealer.

"[It] means that I can no longer sell a gun to my friend. If my neighbor — let's say her husband is gone for the week and she wants to borrow my gun, that would make us both felons," Crenshaw eplained, adding that "the people who are least likely to adhere to a universal background check are the criminals who intend harm."

He also questioned the need for red flag laws, saying, "What you’re essentially trying to do with a red flag law is enforce the law before the law has been broken, and it’s a really difficult thing to do. It’s difficult to assess whether somebody is a threat."

"Now, if they're such a threat that they are threatening someone with a weapon already, well then, they've already broken the law. So why do we need this other law?" he added.

Matthew McConaughey calls for action after hometown school massacre: 'This is an epidemic we can control'



Academy Award-winning actor Matthew McConaughey called for an end to gun violence in the wake of a mass shooting that left 19 students and two teachers dead in his hometown of Uvalde, Texas.

The “Dallas Buyers Club” actor posted a statement on Instagram on Tuesday urging Americans to ask themselves "what small sacrifices can we individually take today, to preserve a healthier and safer nation, state, and neighborhood tomorrow?” following reports of a mass shooting at Robb Elementary School in his hometown.

"As you all are aware, there was another mass shooting today, this time in my hometown of Uvalde, Texas. Once again, we have tragically proven that we are failing to be responsible for the rights our freedoms grant us," McConaughey's statement began.

"We cannot exhale once again, make excuses, and accept these tragic realities as the status quo," he continued.

McConaughey said it's time to "re-evaluate, and renegotiate our wants from our needs" and "rearrange our values" to find common ground to change the "devastating American reality that has tragically become our children’s issue."

“This is an epidemic we can control, and whichever side of the aisle we may stand on, we all know we can do better. We must do better. Action must be taken so that no parent has to experience what the parents in Uvalde and the others before them have endured,” he added.


Matthew McConaughey explains why he decided not to enter Texas gubernatorial race



Actor Matthew McConaughey has finally revealed why he chose not to enter the Texas gubernatorial race in 2022.

McConaughey tweeted a video on November 28 announcing that he has chosen not to seek the governor's office in his home state of Texas at this time.

"Over the past two years, I've been working on the answer to the question of how I can be most useful in this life going forward. Useful to myself, useful to my family, and to the most amount of people. One category of service I've been exploring is politics," McConaughey said.

"As a simple kid born in the little town of Uvalde, Texas, it never occurred to me that I would one day be considered for political leadership. It's a humbling and inspiring path to ponder. It is also a path that I'm choosing not to take at this moment," he continued.

McConaughey explained in the video that moving forward, he would invest his money in businesses, entrepreneurs, and foundations that he believes "have a mission to serve and build trust while also generating prosperity."

pic.twitter.com/CKIYE7V6v6
— Matthew McConaughey (@Matthew McConaughey) 1638144429

The actor was asked to elaborate on his decision not to run for governor during his appearance on "The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon" Tuesday night. He explained that with three children ages 13, 11, and 8, a bid for governor is not something that he could do alongside raising a family and acting, which he expressed a desire to continue doing.

When Fallon pressed McConaughey, asking if he had ruled out the possibility of seeking political office at a later date, the actor responded, "I'm not until I am."

When previously asked about his political philosophy and approach to governing by Jeff Krasno in an interview for the Commune podcast in July, McConaughey explained that he is more of a centrist rather than aligning himself with a particular political party.

Matthew McConaughey Explains Why He Didn’t Campaign for Texas Governor | The Tonight Show www.youtube.com

"We're all much more centrist than we're led to believe we are," McConaughey said. "We have the numbers. ... We're running the ship. Now, there's a couple of militia pirate groups that are coming over on the far right and the far left, and we're being told that they're the absolute boogeyman and we better be scared. ... Let's kick 'em off the boat. Don't let 'em board," McConaughey said, according to Newsweek.

There has been some speculation regarding how well the actor would have done if he'd entered the race.

A poll conducted at the University of Texas at Tyler found McConaughey was more favorable among voters than Beto O'Rourke, with a 22% margin of favorability over the Democrat. The same poll reported that McConaughey had an 8% favorability edge over incumbent Governor Greg Abbott.