Conservatives Lose It Over Garth Brooks' Inclusive New Bar & Bud Light

Garth Brooks
Garth Brooks
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Garth Brooks is drawing the ire of conservatives for passing the lowest bar possible for queer allyship: Vowing to serve Bud Light in his new Nashville-based bar Friends in Low Places.

During a Q&A with Billboard, the country legend discussed his new business saying “I want it to be a place you feel safe in. I want it to be a place that you feel like there are manners and people love one another,” adding, “Yes, we’re going to serve every brand of beer. We just are.”

To be fair, allyship is always welcome, especially in spaces like the country music industry where that hasn’t always been the case, but it’s also disheartening that the most basic expectation that a business would not actively exclude queer people has to be considered noteworthy, and worthy of gratitude.

Compared with other people in the music industry’s reaction to Bud Light partnering with trans influencer Dylan Mulvaney — like country singer John Rich suspending the sale of Bud Light at his bae on Nashville’s Broadway or country aesthetic appropriating Michigander Kid Rock shooting up a case of Bud Light — Brooks’ move both feels like progress and even radical.

Sigh.

Brooks affirmed that Friends in Low Places — which is set to open this summer — will be a place where patrons can expect to feel love, and not hate. “Our thing is this: if you come into this house, love one another,” he said. “If you’re an asshole, there are plenty of other places on lower Broadway to go.”

Naturally, conservatives are in full meltdown over Brooks’s statements.


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“How long do you think it will take for Garth Brooks’ bar, Friends in Low Places, in Nashville to go under now that he has alienated much of his clientele? Will it even get off the ground? This bud’s for you. Go woke, go broke!”

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“GO WOKE GO BROKE!!”

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“Garth Brooks and Bud Light … both washed up & irrelevant. I support protecting children from predators at all costs. #BoycottBudLight”

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“Garth Brooks is the Liz Cheney of Country Music! 🎵🎼🎶🎵🎼🎶🎵🎼”

However, fans on social media were quick to point out why Brooks’s comments on inclusion should not come as a shock to anyone who has been paying attention to him — and his lyrics — for decades.

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“Garth Brooks outright saying transphobia won't be tolerated at the bar he's opening in Nashville is not one bit surprising. He's been an ally to LGBTQ folks since the early '90s. We know Garth has got our backs.”

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“Lol at people upset that Garth Brooks won’t join in their anti-LGBTQ Bud Light boycott clearly don’t remember him singing that we shall be free “when we’re free to love anyone we choose” 31 years ago. And then performing it with rainbow stage lights a few years back.”

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“Republicans just noticed Garth Brooks isn’t one of them and it is glorious”

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“All these people mad at Garth Brooks like he didn’t write this in 1992”

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“RWNJ: "Garth went woke!!! 🤬 Let's boycott him" Garth Brooks in 1992: "When we're free to love anyone we choose When this world's big enough for all different views When we all can worship from our own kind of pew Then we shall be free, yeah" 💜💕🩷”

“Just a reminder that Garth Brooks single handedly changed the entire country music scene in the 90s. Radio stations changed formats, bars installed wooden floors for line dancing. His restaurant will be fine without terrible customers.”

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“Just a reminder that Garth Brooks single handedly changed the entire country music scene in the 90s. Radio stations changed formats, bars installed wooden floors for line dancing. His restaurant will be fine without terrible customers.”