The Babylon Bee mocks January 6 hysteria with 'The Most Deadliest Day'



The Babylon Bee has come a long way since its days as a small comedy website making in-jokes about dispensational theology.

In a mere eight years, it's become a major media company with the clout to land interviews with Elon Musk and John Cleese, while arguably overtaking the Onion as America's best satire website.

Mann's shrewd portrayal of an overconfident yet ignorant man-child who sees the world through the simplistic lens of superheroes and supervillains deftly mocks what passes for journalism these days.

Like that formerly great institution, the Bee can be a little hacky or partisan at times, but it's consistently funny and regularly risks the occasional big swing.

The Bee's books "The Postmodern Pilgrim's Progress" and "How to Be a Perfect Christian," for example, are both funny and surprisingly honest about modern challenges in the evangelical world. Having met a few of the Bee's writers and seeing them grow, I’m generally impressed by the wit and cultural relevance the site exhibits.

So I was particularly eager for the release of the company's first feature film, "January 6: The Most Deadliest Day."

The film follows "investigative journalist" Garth Strudelfudd (Babylon Bee editor Kyle Mann, also credited as writer) as he bumbles his way through interviews with conservative pundits and January 6 participants in an attempt to uncover the truth about the darkest day in American history.

Much of the joke here is Mann's earnest investigative journalist persona: He is a deluded crusader convinced that his efforts are crucial to both saving democracy and honoring the “billions” of people who died that day.

There's no mistaking the movie's target audience; it's unlikely that anyone who sees January 6 as a brush with a fascist coup will have his mind changed by what Michael Knowles or Dennis Prager has to say. The pundits in the film are content to make the usual observations about media malfeasance and declining public trust, while pointing out once again that Trump never actually called for violence.

"The Most Deadliest Day" flirts with actual journalism when it focuses on infamous January 6 participants like Jacob Chansley and Adam Johnson. But instead of taking this opportunity to humanize the people labeled as "insurrectionists" by the mainstream media, the movie mostly uses them as props to expose the vacuousness of its fake journalists.

And ultimately it is the media that "The Most Deadliest Day" means to target. This isn't meant to be a hard-hitting expose in the manner of Tucker Carlson or the Epoch Times. Nor is it meant to reach out to those for whom January 6 is one of the high holidays of the liberal liturgical calendar. Unlike Matt Walsh's recent "Am I Racist?" "The Most Deadliest Day" stays behind a subscriber paywall, explicitly marking it for those already in on the joke.

As I’ve written previously, the great risk of every conservative documentary is that it sacrifices persuasion on the altar of reassuring propaganda. But sometimes reassuring propaganda is what's called for.

The Bee knows its audience, and the audience is fed up with media-fueled January 6 hysteria, especially as it ramps up ahead of next month's contentious election. Mann's shrewd portrayal of an overconfident yet ignorant man-child who sees the world through the simplistic lens of superheroes and supervillains deftly mocks what passes for journalism these days, and it's both satisfying and often hilarious.

Babylon Bee battles Newsom's chilling anti-speech law to protect humor and satire



The satirical website the Babylon Bee has had enough. Claiming that California's recent laws on online speech have gone too far, those at the Bee have filed a motion against California’s Attorney General Robert Bonta, urging the courts to immediately halt enforcement of what they see as unconstitutional restrictions. Several new laws, including AB 2355, AB 2655, and AB 2839, have been accused of eroding the First Amendment protections of free speech.

In fact, AB 2839 was recently deemed unconstitutional by a federal judge. Judge John A. Mendez of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of California said the law "acts as a hammer instead of a scalpel" and "hinders humorous expression."

In an exclusive interview with Blaze News, Kristen Waggoner of the Alliance Defending Freedom spoke about the ongoing battle on behalf of the Babylon Bee.

"California's laws are a roadmap for widespread censorship. They use vague standards to punish people for posting certain political memes online," Waggoner said. "If Americans can be sued for posting, or even reposting political jokes, then we do not live in a free society."

Perhaps the most egregious law is AB 2655, also known as the Defending Democracy from Deepfake Deception Act of 2024.

The bill's digest says the law prohibits any person or entity from distributing deceptive audio or visual media about a candidate for elected office within 60 days of the election. If the content intends to "injure the candidate’s reputation or to deceive a voter into voting for or against the candidate," it could be considered illegal.

The law also requires any "large online platform" to block deceptive content before and after an election.

'Individuals must be able to express political beliefs without fear.'

Under the California law, platforms are required to develop reporting procedures for California residents to flag any content that "has not been blocked or labeled in compliance with the act."

The laws "censor parody and satire," Waggoner continued. "When Governor Newsom signed the laws, he said publicly that [California] made it illegal to post a parody video about Kamala Harris. So even Governor Newsom thinks the laws ban satire," she claimed.

Waggoner went on to say that the same government officials can't seem to articulate to the public how far the laws will go. These acts would "kill humor," Waggoner said, adding that they could blur the lines between a democracy and a dictatorship.

Based on what were described as vague standards with steep penalties, the Babylon Bee is asking the government to stop the new laws before they get out of control.

"In a free society, individuals must be able to express political beliefs without fear of being dragged into court to defend a meme. And we shouldn't trust politicians like Gavin Newsom to be arbiters of political truth online," the attorney added.

Newsom's spokesperson, Izzy Gardon, said in a statement that the governor's office was "confident" courts would ultimately uphold the new law against "deepfakes."

"Deepfakes threaten the integrity of our elections, and these new laws protect our democracy while preserving free speech," the spokesperson said.

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Babylon Bee CEO donates $100k to stop Amendment 4 and KEEP Florida pro-life



Florida’s Amendment 4 would essentially legalize abortion up to the point of birth — and among other things, it’s on the ballot this November.

Babylon Bee CEO Seth Dillon has donated $100,000 of his own money to convince Floridians to vote no on the amendment and keep the Sunshine State pro-life.

“The biggest thing that’s going to make a difference in whether or not Amendment 4 gets passed is whether people understand what’s in it,” Dillon tells Jill Savage and Matthew Peterson of “Blaze News Tonight.”

However, Dillon explains that the “way the amendment is crafted is very conniving and misleading.”

“It’s intentionally written as this very vague thing that sounds like it’s just allowing for abortion up to the point of viability,” he continues. “A lot of people think that’s a reasonable thing, and so it has a lot of support.”

The amendment claims it will simply create a constitutional right for abortion up to the point of viability, but it’s worded to allow more. It cites that if a “health care provider” — not a physician — but a “health care provider” deems that an abortion is necessary for the health of the mother, then it would be allowed in other cases beyond the point of viability.

“That just raises the question, OK, well what constitutes a health issue?” Dillon says, adding that a health care provider “could literally just be a clinic worker at Planned Parenthood.”

“It would remove parental consent and make it just parental notification so you could have minors who were getting these abortions beyond the point of viability,” he continues. “So it creates all kinds of problems that are kind of under the surface.”


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Elon Musk says he agrees with Christ's teachings as Babylon Bee hosts ask him to accept Jesus as his savior



Billionaire Tesla and SpaceX entrepreneur Elon Musk said that he agrees with Jesus Christ's teachings during a recent interview.

What are the details?

During his late December interview with the Babylon Bee, Musk shared his thoughts about Jesus Christ and religion.

Speaking with the Christian website's CEO Seth Dillon, editor-in-chief Kyle Mann, and former creative director Ethan Nicolle, Musk said that he'd be saved if Jesus is saving people.

For the wide-ranging interview's last question, Nicolle said, "Babylon Bee is a Christian organization and we're a ministry. ... To make this church, we're wondering if you could do us a quick solid and accept Jesus as your Lord and Savior? ... Personal Lord and Savior. It's a quick prayer."

Musk responded, "I agree with the principles that Jesus advocated."

"There's some great wisdom in the teachings of Jesus, and I agree with those teachings," he said, pointing out forgiveness and the Golden Rule.

“Things like turn the other cheek are very important, as opposed to an eye for an eye. An eye for an eye leaves everyone blind,” Musk maintained. "Forgiveness is important, and treating people as you would wish to be treated. Love thy neighbor as thyself."

“As Einstein would say, ‘I believe in the God of Spinoza,'" Musk said, referring to the quote believed to have been spoken by Albert Einstein in 1921. Einstein was believed to have said, “I believe in Spinoza’s God who reveals himself in the orderly harmony of what exists, not in a God who concerns himself with fates and actions of human beings.”

Musk added, "But hey, if Jesus is saving people, I mean, I won’t stand in His way. Sure, I’ll be saved. Why not?”

“I think he just said yes,” Nicolle said. “We got him.”

In 2013, Musk told actor Rainn Wilson that he wasn't sure about religious beliefs and didn't believe that science and faith could logically coexist.

When asked if he ever prays, Musk at the time responded, "I didn’t even pray when I almost died of malaria.”

However, in 2020, Musk admitted that he prayed before a SpaceX launch.

“You know, I’m not very religious, but I prayed for this one," the tech guru said at the time.

FULL INTERVIEW: Elon Musk Sits Down With The Babylon Bee youtu.be