Hollywood spent decades telling Christians to shut up and sit down.
They said faith-based films would never make money.
And Kelsey Grammer just exposed the billion-dollar lie Hollywood has been hiding from Americans.
Hollywood's war on Christian moviegoers backfired spectacularly
Kelsey Grammer has been a fixture in entertainment for decades thanks to "Cheers" and "Frasier."
But unlike the cowards in Tinseltown who bend the knee to woke mobs, Grammer refuses to hide his faith.
The actor just revealed what Hollywood executives have known for years but desperately tried to suppress.
"Most of the people in America actually still really like God and Jesus," Grammer told "Morning Wire" while promoting his new faith-based film "The Christmas Ring."¹
That's the dirty secret Disney and Warner Brothers don't want their shareholders to know.
While Hollywood poured hundreds of millions into woke garbage that tanked, faith-based films have been printing money.
"Sound of Freedom" made $250 million worldwide on a $14.5 million budget.
"Jesus Revolution" — where Grammer played Pastor Chuck Smith — pulled in $52 million on just $15 million.
Meanwhile, Disney's "The Marvels" lost an estimated $237 million pushing feminist propaganda nobody wanted.
"Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny" hemorrhaged over $100 million promoting tired woke storylines.
The pattern couldn't be clearer, but Hollywood kept lying about what audiences actually wanted.
Grammer reveals how God keeps sending him these roles
Grammer didn't go searching for faith-based projects.
The night before reading the "Jesus Revolution" script, he was wondering about his next career move.
"I just wanna do something that means something, that has some meaning," he recalled. "And the next morning, that script came."²
His latest film "The Christmas Ring" features roughly 100 real-life veterans and active-duty service members.
"It was just an opportunity to salute the troops," Grammer explained, noting how the story traces back to World War II and D-Day.³
"We didn't reinvent the wheel or anything," Grammer said. "But it's a nice story about redemption and love and forgiveness and about Jesus."⁴
That kind of talk sends Hollywood executives running for the exits.
"I'm a believer," he stated. "I don't go around proselytizing . . . but I would never deny Christ. I would never deny Him."⁵
Try finding that kind of courage from the usual Hollywood crowd.
Most celebrities would rather eat glass than publicly defend Christianity.
Grammer described the world Christ was born into as violent and chaotic under Roman rule.
"God chose to send a baby to save the world," Grammer noted. "Pretty fascinating."⁶
Americans celebrate this story every single Christmas.
"We get to watch it . . . every year at Christmas, we get to see the same story told again and again . . . it's our story," Grammer said.⁷
Then Grammer dropped the truth bomb — there's a real "hunger" for faith-based films in America.⁸
The box office numbers prove it beyond any doubt.
"Sound of Freedom" didn't just succeed — it dominated the summer box office against films with ten times its budget while exposing child trafficking Hollywood elites tried desperately to discredit.
Faith-based films keep crushing expectations because they give audiences what they actually want instead of what some purple-haired activist in Burbank thinks they should want.
Disney just announced they're cutting back on Marvel movies after years of tanking woke superhero films.
Warner Brothers is scrambling to figure out why nobody wants their reimagined franchises.
Meanwhile, Angel Studios — which distributed "Sound of Freedom" — is building an entire business model around faith and family content.
Hollywood finally figured out they've been lying to themselves about America.
Americans still love God and Jesus.
They want to see that reflected in their entertainment.
And they'll pay billions of dollars to prove it.
The only question is how long it'll take the rest of Hollywood to stop fighting reality.
¹ Amanda Harding, "'It's Our Story': Kelsey Grammer Says Americans Are Hungry For Faith-Based Films," Daily Wire, December 26, 2025.
² Ibid.
³ Ibid.
⁴ Ibid.
⁵ Ibid.
⁶ Ibid.
⁷ Ibid.
⁸ Ibid.

