Country music star Garth Brooks may sing about beer chasing his blues away, but did his support for Anheuser Busch chase hordes of his fans away?
That’s what oneheadlineon a satirical website said. “Typically Sold-Out Garth Brooks Plays to a Half-Empty Arena: ‘It Was Embarrassing,’” read the Dunning-Kruger Times story published in late June.
Texas Agriculture Commissioner Sid Miller shared the story June 25 with his Facebook followers as though it were legitimate news, with the caption: “OMGosh! This is EPIC! America SPEAKS! WOW!”
“Good! He deserves it,” one commenter responded.
“Hopefully lesson learned,” wrote another.
(Screenshot/Facebook)
This was not the only Dunning-Kruger Times article about Brooks that caught politicians’ attention. On June 25, Texas Gov. Greg Abbotttweeteda Dunning-Kruger article about Brooks allegedly being booed off a Texas stage, as if it were a real news story. Abbott appeared to realize his mistake and quickly deleted the tweet.
To people familiar with America’s Last Line of Defense, a network of sitesknown for producing content that is often shared as misinformation, the Dunning-Kruger Times URL may have been tipoff enough that this was intended as parody.
On itsAbout Uspage, the website says, “Dunning-Kruger-Times.com is a subsidiary of the ‘America’s Last Line of Defense’ network of parody, satire, and tomfoolery, or as Snopes called it before they lost their war on satire: Junk News.” At the bottom of every webpage, it describes itself as “Paid Liberal Trolls of America.”
A click on the link was another giveaway.
Brooks, the piece said, played at “Geico Memorial Arena in Jostenberg, Illinois,” and was considering canceling an upcoming date at “Haremfeather Norfolk Amphitheater in East Chicago.”
Neither are real venues, as the story acknowledges: “Considering there’s a good chance that town doesn’t exist, will they miss me?” Brooks is quoted as saying.
The parody and fictionalized outrage refer to Anheuser-Busch’spartnershipwith transgender social media influencer Dylan Mulvaney.
Mulvaney is known for documenting her gender transition on TikTok, where she has nearly 11 million followers. In April, she announced a Bud Light conteston her Instagram accountduring the NCAA basketball tournament.
Bud Light hassince faced calls for boycotts, including by singers Travis Tritt and Kid Rock.
Brooks, meanwhile, is a longtime proponent of LGBTQ+ rights. In mid-June, hesaidthat he planned to sell “every brand of beer” at a bar he is opening in Nashville, Tennessee.
Brooks’ hasn’t had a scheduled performance since he made that announcement. Hisremaining 2023 concertsare all in Las Vegas, where he’s doing a residency at Caesars Palace.
Miller did not respond to PolitiFact’s requests for comment. But after PolitiFact reached out to his team June 29, Miller corrected the post, adding the line, “(This is a satirical post folks! Watch this come true, most Garth fans ain’t woke!)”
The claim that Brooks recently played to a half-empty arena in Illinois was fabricated. We rate it Pants on Fire!
This fact check was originallypublished by PolitiFact, which is part of the Poynter Institute. See the sources for this fact check here.