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American conservative activist and music video director From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Robby Starbuck is an American conservative activist and former music video director.[2] He ran in the 2022 United States House of Representatives elections in Tennessee as a write-in candidate[3] and was unsuccessful. As an activist, he has campaigned against companies popular with conservatives because of their DEI initiatives.[4]
Starbuck directed music videos and commercials in California before moving to Williamson County, Tennessee in 2019.[1] He transitioned to investing in real estate and the stock market.[1]
Starbuck said he had received pushback from being a Republican in Hollywood and began posting about his beliefs on social media in 2015.[1] During the COVID-19 pandemic, he campaigned against mask and vaccine mandates.[5][6] In 2021, Starbuck declared his candidacy for the Republican nomination to represent Tennessee's 5th congressional district.[7] The state Republican party removed him from the 2022 primary ballot, and this decision was ultimately upheld by the Tennessee Supreme Court.[7] Starbuck instead ran as a write-in candidate, but did not get the nomination.[1]
In June 2023, a photo agency issued a legal threat to Starbuck after he used a copyrighted paparazzi photo of Megan Fox and her family in a social media post accusing the actress of "child abuse" for having "forced" her children to "wear girls clothes".[8] Fox responded to Starbuck's post, saying "Exploiting my child's gender identity to gain attention in your political campaign has put you on the wrong side of the universe."[8]
In June 2024, Starbuck began campaigning on social media against companies popular with conservatives because of their DEI initiatives, support for LGBTQ+ events, climate change strategies, and other social policies.[5] Starbuck chose brands that implemented these programs in recent years and may be less likely to resist pressure.[5] His employees helped him research the companies’ policies and their executives’ backgrounds.[5] He focused on one company at a time, posting dozens of times over the course of weeks urging his followers to protest with their voices and wallets.[4] Tractor Supply was the first company to roll back their initiatives within that same month.[4][5] John Deere announced that it would no longer sponsor “social or cultural awareness” events and would audit all its training materials in July.[4][5] In August, Harley-Davidson, Brown-Forman, Lowe's, and Ford Motor Company rolled back several of their DEI initiatives and ended their respective relationships with Human Rights Campaign.[4][5][9] In September 2024, Molson Coors[10] and Caterpillar Inc.[11] did the same. In October 2024, Toyota did the same.[12]
Starbuck's documentary The War on Children, which aired on X (formerly Twitter) in February 2024,[13] opposes gender-affirming care.[6] The documentary contains interviews with Riley Gaines, Chaya Raichik of Libs of TikTok, and US Senator Rand Paul, among others.[13] The film's website states that it "exposes the WAR that's being waged on children today through gender ideology, ESG, CRT, sexualization of entertainment, sex trafficking, online exploitation, TikTok, Big Pharma and more".[14] The film opposes gender-affirming care[6] and promotes the conspiracy theory that toxic chemicals were responsible for causing children to identify as LGBTQ+.[15] News outlets have described the film as "anti-trans"[16][17] and "anti-LGBTQ+".[18]
In 2023, the filmmakers attempted to interview transgender activist Eli Erlick and Nebraska Senator Megan Hunt for the documentary.[19] After discovering that Starbuck was behind the film, Erlick posted warnings on her social media. Rolling Stone noted that LGBTQ+ community members and allies accused the filmmakers of having used deceptive practices in trying to gain their cooperation.[20] Drag queen Veronika Electronika told Rolling Stone she was misled into doing an interview for the film, and her conversation was heavily edited.[20] The filmmakers also invited drag queen activist Lil Miss Hot Mess to participate, but she withdrew after learning who they were.[20]
Elon Musk recommended the film.[21] Musk also previously promoted the trailer, which then received over 30 million views.[6] A group planned to screen the film at a movie theater in Vernon, British Columbia, but another local group lobbied the theater to cancel the screening due to concerns about the film harming marginalized people and potentially violating the Human Rights Code of British Columbia.[22][23] In Ottawa County, Michigan, a commissioner promoted the film during a public meeting,[24] which may have been against county policy.[25]
Starbuck was raised by his mother and grandparents, who had fled Cuba in the 1960s.[1][4] He is married to Landon Starbuck, a musician who performed under the name of Matriarch. They have four children.[1][26]
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