The Chicks' Natalie Maines Calls Trump a 'Fugly Slut' 23 Years After Her Anti-War Message for Bush Got Her Pulled from Radio

The Chicks' Natalie Maines called President Donald Trump a "fugly slut" in a new Instagram post

People Natalie Maines of The Chicks in September 2023 in Dana Point, Calif.Credit: Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic

NEED TO KNOW

  • "Our democracy is disappearing right before our eyes," the singer began the Monday, May 18 post

  • In March 2003, Maines made a brief comment ahead of a London concert, voicing her disapproval of the Iraq war and then-President George W. Bush

Natalie Maineshas called out PresidentDonald Trump.

On Monday, May 18,The Chicks'bandleader — who has long been outspoken about politics — shared anInstagram postcalling out Trump, 79, and the U.S. government.

"Our democracy is disappearing right before our eyes," Maines, 51, began the caption. "This fugly slut is using your gas money to pay the insurrectionists. But don't worry about it. I'm sure posting selfies will fix everything."

She continued, "My last post that called him a fugly slut got removed. We'll see how long this one lasts. Repost and help the message live. Named 1M times in the #epsteinfiles #democracy #freespeech #fuglyslut."

Alongside the caption, the "Gaslighter" singer shared a series of photos including one of Trump, as well as what appear to be images ofTrump voters who stormed the U.S. Capitol in January 2021.

PEOPLE has reached out to The White House for comment.

Maines' post comes 23 years after she made a brief comment ahead of a London concert in March 2003, voicing her disapproval of the Iraq war and then-PresidentGeorge W. Bush.

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“Just so you know, we're on the good side with y'all,” she said at the time. “We do not want this war, this violence. And we're ashamed the president of the United States is from Texas.”

The Chicks in 2003Credit: R. Diamond/WireImage

Afterward, Maines' comments sparked backlash, as fans burned their CDs and radios banned their music from the airwaves, which at the time included their 2002 track "Travelin' Soldier," which peaked at No. 1 on Billboard's Hot Country Songs chart. The country trio's music career stalled amid the controversy.

In March 2020, Maines and bandmates Martie Maguire and Emily Strayer appeared onThe Ellen DeGeneres Show, where they reflected on being among the first entertainers to be blacklisted forpublic comments considered to be controversial.

“I think we were one of the first people to feel that ‘cancel culture' and I think, you know, what we said — or, whatIsaid — back then would not even be a thing today because it was really mild compared to what people say today,” said the lead vocalist.

In April 2020, Mainesspoke toAllureabout the fallout of her statements and revealed how shocked she was that thecountry music industry was so swift to ostracize themat the time.

“When we started doing this music, I liked the people in our industry. We always waved that country flag when people would say it wasn't cool. And then to see how quickly the entire industry turned on us,” she recalled.

Maines continued: “I wanted the audience to know who we were and what we were about. I do not like when artists get on their soapbox — it's not what people are there for; they're there to listen to your music — [but] the politics of this band is inseparable from the music.”

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The Chicks' Natalie Maines Calls Trump a 'Fugly Slut' 23 Years After Her Anti-War Message for Bush Got Her Pulled from Radio

The Chicks' Natalie Maines called President Donald Trump a "fugly slut" in a new Instagram post NEED TO KNOW ...
Nicholas Galitzine and Original He-Man Dolph Lundgren Share a Special Moment at “Masters of the Universe” Premiere

Nicholas Galitzine stars as He-Man in the 2026 remake of Masters of the Universe, nearly 40 years after Dolph Lundgren's original portrayal

People Nicholas Galitzine and Dolph Lundgren at the

NEED TO KNOW

  • The two posed together on the carpet and at the after-party of the movie's Los Angeles premiere

  • Lundgren praised Galitzine at the premiere, calling it an honor to pass the role to him

Nicholas GalitzineandDolph Lundgrenprove that there is room in the world for two super-human blonde hunky He-Mans.

Galitzine, 31, stars as the character in 2026's remake ofMasters of the Universe,nearly 40 years after Lundgren, 68, originated the live-action role in the 1987 cult classic. The actors posed together on the carpet of the film's Los Angeles premiere at the TCL Chinese Theatre on Monday, May 18, along with the rest of the cast, which includesMorena Baccarin,Camila MendesandIdris Elba, and director Travis Knight.

Lundgren and Galitzine were also all smiles at the premiere's after-party, posing together with their fists up in true superhero fashion.

Dolph Lundgren, Morena Baccarin, Camila Mendes, Nicholas Galitzine, Travis Knight and Idris Elba at the

Lundgren told PEOPLE at the movie's premiere that seeing Galitzine take on the part felt like "passing the sword over."

"It was a great feeling for me," he said. "It's great that he's such a great He-Man and I think it's a great production and I was really honored to be part of it. It was fun for me to show up in a movie and give him some advice when he needs it the most."

Lundgren reflected on the impact of the franchise, which is based on the Mattel action figures, and its lasting power 40 years later.

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"There's still something special about this franchise," he told PEOPLE. "There's something about what they created back in 1982, I think it was, the series came out, the little cartoon came out and the toys, and there's something about it that people respond to."

Dolph Lundgren in 1987's 'Masters of the Universe' ; Nicholas Galitzine in 2026's 'Masters of the Universe'Credit: Everett; Amazon

InMasters of the Universe, Galitzine's He-Man teams up with warrior Teela (Mendes) and a group of allies against Skeletor (Jared Leto) and sorceress Evil-Lyn (Alison Brie) to save his ravaged home of Eternia.

An official synopsis for the film reads, "To save his family and his world, Adam must join forces with his closest allies, Teela and Duncan/Man-At-Arms and embrace his true destiny as He-Man — the most powerful man in the universe.”

Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

Masters of the Universearrives in theaters June 5.

Read the original article onPeople

Nicholas Galitzine and Original He-Man Dolph Lundgren Share a Special Moment at “Masters of the Universe” Premiere

Nicholas Galitzine stars as He-Man in the 2026 remake of Masters of the Universe , nearly 40 years after Dolph Lundgren's original ...
Victor Wembanyama has BEEN 'the best player in the f***ing world' — and this is only the beginning

I won’t blame you if your jaw hit the floor watchingVictor Wembanyama score his 41 pointsin the thrilling Game 1 win over the Oklahoma City Thunder. The 30-foot, Steph-esque 3-pointer in overtime. The mind-melting dunks all over OKC’s defense. Pure cinema.

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Feel free to shake your head at the fact that he pulled down 24 rebounds, which was more than the entire OKC starting lineup. Add in that he swatted away three OKC offerings and held the Thunder to 35.7% shootingon twoswhile he was on the floor. That’s all great.

But the craziest number of all is 22 — the number of years that Wembanyama has been alive.

“Best player in the f***ing world,” his teammate Stephon Castle said after the game.

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To be clear, that was a reminder, not an announcement. I understand why folks have been reluctant to crown Wembanyama as The Best Player In The F’ing World because we’ve been conditioned to wait until it feels safer. Wait until they hit their prime. Wait until their team has won the championship. Wait until … well, they’re older than 22 f***ing years old.

But as a basketball species, Wemby is different, hence the alien moniker. He’s taller than everybody, yes, but the true differentiator is that he’s processing the game quicker than anyone. I noticed his processing power two years ago when I wrote that he was on theGOAT path. I doubled down this season when I predicted in October that he’d win MVPthis season(he qualified under the 65-game rule, but I don’t think he played enough minutes to convince voters).

So as someone who has been touting Wemby perhaps earlier than most (too early at times!), let me say this: Monday’s Game 1 supernova didn’t establish him as the best player in the galaxy. Because healreadysnatched that mystical accolade weeks ago from Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Nikola Jokić or whichever name you throw into that pile.

We can look at the measurables, which have been admittedly warped downward by Wembanyama’s unexpected absences. The Game 2 concussion against Portland and Game 4 ejection against Minnesota threw a wet blanket on his per-game averages because he only played a handful of minutes in those games.

But rest assured, when Wembanyama was on the floor, he was putting upnumbers. Wembanyama was averaging 25.4 points, 13.9 rebounds and 5.2 blocks per 36 minutes headingintoMonday’s Game 1, hinting that a monster 41-23-3-3 outing was within reach. But judging by his more pedestrian 20.3 points, 10.7 rebounds and 4.1 blocks (OK, that last one isn’t pedestrian), you might not have guessed that Wemby made another leap.

Victor Wembanyama has BEEN 'the best player in the f***ing world' — and this is only the beginning

I won’t blame you if your jaw hit the floor watchingVictor Wembanyama score his 41 pointsin the thrilling Game 1 win over the Oklahoma ...
How Abuse Allegations and a Bitter Custody Fight Led 2 Children to Barricade Themselves for 54 Days (Exclusive)

Utah siblings Ty and Brynlee Larson barricaded themselves in a room at their mother's home for 54 days in 2023 in defiance of a court order requiring they return to the custody of their father, Brent Larson

People Ty Larson livestreamed himself barricaded in a room at his mother's home in Utah in 2023 for 54 days to avoid a judge's order that required him and his sister return to the custody of their father, whom they had accused of sexual abuse. Their father denied the allegations.Credit: ABC News Studio

NEED TO KNOW

  • Ty and Brynlee accused their father of sexually abusing them — allegations he has steadfastly denied and for which he was never criminally charged

  • Brent Larson, in turn, accused his ex-wife and the children's mother, Jessica Zahrt, of undermining his relationship with the children through parental alienation — a claim she denies

When Ty Larson and his sister, Brynlee,barricaded themselves inside a room at their mother’s homein Salem, Utah, in January 2023, Ty says it was a difficult but deliberate decision — one they made entirely on their own.

By then, their parents, Brent Larson and Jessica Zahrt, who'd divorced more than a decade earlier, had spent years locked in a bitter custody battle. The children had accused Larson of sexually abusing them, allegations he vehemently denies. He was never criminally charged. Larson, in turn, alleged that Zahrt had manipulated the children against him, which she denies.

After a judge ordered the children to stay with Larson for 90 days without contact with Zahrt or her family — and possibly participate in reunification therapy — the siblings barricaded themselves inside and livestreamed the standoff on TikTok, drawing widespread attention and support online. They ended the standoff after a judge delayed enforcement of the custody order.

But the custody battle did not end there.

Jessica Zahrt at her home in Utah with her daughter, Brynlee Larson.Credit: ABC News Studio

The family dispute is the subject of a new two-part Hulu docuseries,The Nightmare Upstairs: What Happened to Ty and Bryn?, which takes viewers inside the case through previously unseen footage of Larson's supervised visits with his children, police interviews, courtroom testimony and other material. It begins streaming Tuesday, May 19, on Hulu and Disney+.

Ty and Zahrt spoke to PEOPLE in separate interviews ahead of the release.

"I lived in a dissociative state for that period of time, because it just was surreal," Zahrt tells PEOPLE of her children's 54-day barricade, adding that she constantly feared they might run away or that officers would use force, as permitted by the court order, to remove them from her custody. "I didn't know what was going to happen, and so I just felt like I was floating through that whole experience."

In 2018, Ty and Brynlee came forward to Zahrt separately with allegations that their father had sexually abused them. Ty also accused his father of emotional abuse. Zahrt reported the allegations to police and to Utah's Division of Family Services, which found the claims "supported." Larson's time with Ty and Brynlee was then restricted to supervised monthly visits. But the Salt Lake County District Attorney's Office declined to file charges.

The case has drawn attention to Utah's family court system, the handling of abuse allegations, reunification efforts and claims regarding parental alienation — when one parent turns children against the other parent.

Ty, Zahrt and Larson each believe they were harmed by the system, with Larson saying family court "operates on accusation."

Related:Utah Siblings Brynlee and Ty Larson Speak Out After Barricading Themselves in a Bedroom for Two Months During Family's Bitter Custody Battle

"The moment someone accuses you of abuse, you're instantly separated from your children and forced to spend years apart and spend an absurd amount of money you don't have just to try to see your kids," Larson tells PEOPLE in a statement. "You endure years of supervised visits, reunification supervision multiple times, endless legal battles, social media attacks, countless lies thrown at you and a system that treats you as if you are a criminal. There are no checks and balances in family law."

Zahrt says she, too, faced attacks and incurred debt as she fought for her children. She says she owes nearly $300,000 in legal fees. She was criticized in a lengthy ruling by the judge overseeing the case, who said he believed she encouraged the children to barricade themselves and interfered with reunification therapy. Zahrt says those assertions pushed her into a dark place when she first read the ruling, but she has since made peace with them.

"I'll never succeed at swaying people's opinions of me,” she tells PEOPLE. "It's never going to happen, especially when it comes to something as highly sensitive as family court. What has been important to me is focusing on where I can make a difference: within the walls of my home, making sure my kids know that I was never exploiting them or that I was never doing anything to hurt them."

Criminal Justice Course Inspired Barricade Plan

Ty says he came up with the idea to barricade himself while taking a criminal justice course in 10th grade. During a lesson on the roles of police and peace officers — the latter of whom he believed would enforce the judge's order — he began thinking about how he could resist.

"If I barricaded, they couldn't do anything because it wasn't criminal," he recalls thinking. "They couldn't force me out initially. So I thought, 'What if I just locked myself in my room with a bunch of food, everything I need, and then I livestream it so everybody sees it. What are they going to do?' "

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He says he shared his plan with Brynlee but discouraged her from joining him.

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"I knew it would be a mental strain on her," he says. But she wanted to participate. "It was a joint effort between us."

Ty says he stocked the room with enough food and other supplies — oats, honey, pancake batter, protein bars, peanut butter, bottled water, soap, toilet paper, towels and clothes — to last them six months.

"We just got anything that had protein and a long shelf life," he says.

One of the most challenging parts of their isolation, Ty says, was hearing his mother through the bedroom door without being able to interact with her as they normally would.

"It was a weird feeling, especially for months on end," he says. "I told myself almost every day that I needed to do it to save me and my sister."

He also insists his mother discouraged them from barricading themselves. "Every single day she would come talk to us to get us out, bribe us out with anything," he says. "And we would refuse."

Brent Larson and Jessica Zahrt divorced in 2012 and spent years locked in a bitter custody battle.Credit: ABC News Studio

The Aftermath

After the barricade ended, a ruling required Ty and Brynlee to resume visits with Larson. This prompted Ty to file for emancipation and move out of Zahrt's home in April 2023 at age 17. He says he worked multiple jobs to survive on his own while also taking classes to graduate.

"I wanted to just get away," he says.

His attorney at the time advised him not to have contact with his family to prove to the court he could live on his own, so he spoke to Brynlee and Zahrt infrequently.

"It was stressful," he says. "It was a hopeless time in my life where I felt like I was working for nothing, because nothing was working." In December 2024, he moved back in with Zahrt. Ty and Brynlee, now 18 and 15, both live with Zahrt, who has full custody of Brynlee.

Ty remains active on TikTok and now focuses much of his content on travel, including trips to Disneyland and other theme parks. (Zahrt says they have also visited national parks together — "to heal, get out in nature and spend time as a family.")

"I love traveling," Ty says. "That's probably the biggest change in my life. I'm just trying to live a little bit of my childhood that I couldn't when I was young."

If you or someone you know has been a victim of sexual abuse, text "STRENGTH" to the Crisis Text Line at 741-741 to be connected to a certified crisis counselor.

The Nightmare Upstairs: What Happened to Ty and Bryn?premieres Tuesday, May 19, onHuluandHulu on Disney+.

Read the original article onPeople

How Abuse Allegations and a Bitter Custody Fight Led 2 Children to Barricade Themselves for 54 Days (Exclusive)

Utah siblings Ty and Brynlee Larson barricaded themselves in a room at their mother's home for 54 days in 2023 in defiance of a cou...

 

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