Rapper Snoop Dogg is learning firsthand what happens when Hollywood’s cultural agenda collides with common-sense concerns about kids and family entertainment. After facing backlash over his comments on the same-sex kiss scene in Disney/Pixar’s Lightyear, Snoop offered a simple mea culpa: “my bad.”
The controversy began when Snoop reflected on his experience watching Lightyear with his grandson. He admitted he wasn’t prepared to explain why a children’s movie featured LGBTQ content. “I was just caught off guard and had no answer for my grandsons. All my gay friends [know] what’s up, they been calling me with love,” he said, responding to a Hollywood Unlocked clip of actor T.S. Madison criticizing him.
Snoop doubled down on his point that his reaction wasn’t about hostility toward anyone, but about the reality parents and grandparents face when navigating cultural debates thrust into children’s programming. “My bad for not knowing the answers for a six-year-old. Teach me how to learn. I’m not perfect,” he added.
The pushback he received highlighted the double standard in how entertainment is judged. In Madison’s clip, the actor asked why Snoop would show women “dancing naked” and “kissing other women” in music videos yet seem hesitant to explain why Disney chose to include a lesbian kiss in a kids’ film. A TMZ reporter, speaking on Snoop’s behalf, responded that music videos are “not for kids,” unlike a Pixar film, which families expect to be safe for children. Madison countered by claiming, “kids see everything.”
That exchange underscores a bigger issue: parents once trusted children’s programming to be an escape from adult debates and agendas. Today, many feel they can’t take their kids—or grandkids—to the movies without worrying about being blindsided.
Snoop originally voiced his frustration on the It’s Giving podcast, where he described the shock of watching the scene. “Oh shit, I didn’t come in for this shit. I just came to watch the goddamn movie,” he recalled. “It fucked me up. I’m, like, scared to go to the movies now. Y’all throwing me in the middle of shit that I don’t have an answer for.”
The rapper’s words echo a sentiment shared by countless families who want to enjoy a story without political or cultural messaging layered into children’s entertainment. As he put it plainly: “These are kids. We have to show that at this age? They’re going to ask questions. I don’t have the answer.”
While Hollywood elites push back on his comments, Snoop’s candid reaction revealed a truth that resonates well beyond his own fan base: when corporations prioritize social agendas over storytelling, it’s everyday families who are left navigating the fallout. And parents are increasingly asking whether this kind of cultural engineering belongs in the theater at all.
Money before convictions, no wonder humanity is screwed up.
Lesbian moms, really. So now they can procreate without a sperm donor, aka a male. When did that happen. You do realize that if all women were lesbian or totally trans male. The species of homosapiens would die out in a generation or two. Just a fact.