'Happy' singer Pharrell Williams just gave his two cents on politics: 'Shut up. Nobody asked you.'



American singer, songwriter, and producer Pharrell Williams will not be joining Taylor Swift and the long list of celebrities endorsing a presidential candidate this election cycle.

In fact, he thinks that celebrities should refrain from engaging in politics altogether.

“I don’t do politics,” the “Happy” singer told the Hollywood Reporter. “In fact, I get annoyed sometimes when I see celebrities trying to tell you [who to vote for].”

“Shut up. Nobody asked you,” Williams said in reference to celebrities who use their platforms to influence politics.

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Columnist Karol Markowicz commends Williams for keeping his political ideology to himself and says she prefers when celebrities stay away from politics.

Dave Rubin thinks that Williams’ silence on political matters is because he’s secretly a conservative.

“Adam Carolla said to me many years ago that if you don't know what a celebrity thinks, then they're a conservative,” he says.

“Pharrell is my new favorite guy,” adds Dr. Drew Pinsky. “I love that he said that.”

To hear more of the conversation, watch the clip above.

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Pharrell Williams speaks at Terry McAuliffe campaign event, but doesn't tell Virginians to vote for him



Music mogul Pharrell Williams spoke at a campaign event for Democrat Terry McAuliffe on Friday, where, prior to introducing McAuliffe, he did not tell the crowd they should vote for McAuliffe.

What happened?

While on the campaign stage to seemingly stump for McAuliffe, Williams — a Virginia native — made it clear that he was not there to tell Virginians which candidate they should support.

"I'm not here to tell you to vote for a person or vote for a party," Williams said. "I'm asking you to vote and be a part of the process of being a Virginian."

Several seconds later, Williams continued, "So again: When you go home, if you haven't voted already, speak to your neighbor no matter what color they are, no matter what color they're wearing. Speak to your fellow Virginian. That's how we show love to one another."

"Last, but not least, I'm going to bring, um, uh, the former governor, and maybe the governor to be again, um, Terry McAuliffe," Williams added.

Despite the unenthusiastic introduction, McAuliffe has claimed that Williams endorses his candidacy.

Pharrell Williams Delivers Remarks At Terry McAuliffe Rally Ahead Of November Elections www.youtube.com

The campaign of Glenn Youngkin, the Republican challenging McAuliffe, interpreted Williams' comments as telling the assembled crowd that voting for Youngkin is OK.

"At Terry McAuliffe's event, Pharrell Williams told the crowd it's OK if they vote for Glenn Youngkin," the Youngkin campaign tweeted.

Anything else?

In the final days of the gubernatorial campaign, McAuliffe's campaign has enlisted a host of high-profile celebrities and politicians — including President Joe Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris, and former President Barack Obama — to campaign on McAuliffe's behalf.

Harris, in fact, campaigned for McAuliffe at the same event in Norfolk where Williams unenthusiastically introduced McAuliffe.

Polling leading up to the Nov. 2 election demonstrate why McAuliffe's campaign is pulling out all the stops to woo Virginia voters.

According to the FiveThirtyEight average of polls, McAuliffe's lead over Youngkin has evaporated completely. Whereas McAuliffe was leading Youngkin by a nearly 8-point average in August, Youngkin now holds a narrow lead over McAuliffe.

Musician Pharrell Williams: BLM rioters who tear down statues are just like Revolutionary War patriots



Grammy Award-winning recording artist Pharrell Williams recently compared Black Lives Matter rioters who tear down statues to the patriots who dumped tea in the Boston Harbor and fought during the American Revolution.

Williams drew the comparisons in an op-ed for Time magazine posted Thursday, in which the musician made the case that America's past and present are "racist" and that what's needed is a "black future."

In the op-ed, Williams writes fondly of the protests that have swept the nation following George Floyd's death in late May, suggesting that the events — which have frequently devolved into violence — have granted him a renewed a sense of patriotism.

"The ongoing protests for equity and accountability that have overtaken cities across the nation have made me feel something new that I can only describe with one word: American," he wrote.

Then he gets historical, hoping to make his case that the precinct-burners and statue-removers are just like the patriots of old.

Here's what he said (emphasis mine):

The desperate longing for economic justice that spurred unrest in the streets of Minneapolis after George Floyd's murder reminds me of the same fire that burned in the veins of the Sons of Liberty when they dumped 342 chests of tea into the sea at Griffin's Wharf. (Now we call that incident "the Boston Tea Party"—which is a poetic way to describe a "riot.") When I see people tearing down the monuments to secessionist traitors who wanted to start their own white-supremacist nation, I see patriots acting in service of this country. It reminds me of the protesters who were inspired to tear down the statue of King George on July 9, 1776, after they heard Thomas Jefferson's letter telling his oppressors to kick rocks. Those "thugs" would serve under the direction of George Washington in the American Revolution. But the Declaration of Independence makes it sound dignified: "In every stage of these oppressions we have petitioned for redress in the most humble terms," wrote our Founding Fathers. "Our repeated petitions have been answered only by repeated injury."

"The activists who tossed chests of tea into the ocean to protest economic injustice were patriots. But they were also oppressors, unwilling to extend the freedoms for which they fought to everyone," Williams argued later in the piece.

He also called for economic reparations to pay for the damages incurred due to slavery.

"We deserve the interest earned from those Confederate dollars and the refund of our tax dollars handed out to our white brothers and sisters in the New Deal while our neighborhoods were redlined," he argued. "We want the return on our investment from when our local tax dollars funded schools our children couldn't attend."

The op-ed is part of Time Magazine's forthcoming Aug. 31-Sep. 7 issue, fittingly titled, "The New American Revolution."