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Kid Rock gets brutally honest with Glenn Beck about ‘cowboy culture,’ politics, and how to be an American ‘bad***’

Music legend Kid Rock sat down with the co-founder of Blaze Media Glenbeck This week, Blaze News can report on a wide range of interviews that touch on everything from Magazine politics to Rodeo clowns.

As expected, now that President Donald Trump has returned to his elliptical office, Lock spent a lot of time on the current political situation in America, and Bob Richie was given to him.

Rock told Beck that he supported Trump, the famous “business guy” from the moment he rode the escalator to announce his presidential candidacy in 2015.

“The America of Business has been sucked in for decades and decades. Let's get people to get in there that know how to run a business,” Locke recalls thinking back then. “That's why I supported him.”

“I'm actually trying to unite this country, and at the end of the month I'll take Bill Maher to the White House for dinner.”

Locke once thought he was socially free and financially conservative, but the issue of transgenderism drove him out of that libertarian mindset. “I mean, these people are just nuts!” Locke said.

“I really don't care what anyone is going to do,” he repeated. “I'm 'Live, live,' to some extent, but it's just too nutty. ”

Locke considers transgenderism to be a mental illness, but he said he is willing to engage in political debates with anyone as long as he is “rational.” In fact, he is so determined to help Americans on the left and right find “a common ground” that he even plans to introduce Trump to left-leaning critic and fierce Trump critic Bill Maher.

“I'm actually trying to unite this country, and at the end of the month I'll take Bill Maher to the White House for dinner,” Lock told Beck.

“We have to start somewhere,” Locke adds, indicating that conferences are more about bringing people together than resolving political differences.

“We just broke bread, had a laugh, took a picture, “Hey, you know, we don't agree with everything, but we got along well,” he explained.

Just as strange as Trump, Rock and Maher ideas gathered around the White House dinner table, Rock suggested that Trump might already agree. According to Rock, Trump said, “Yeah, let's do it. Let's do it.”

Neither the White House nor Maher representatives responded to Blaze News' requests for comment.

“There's something in the West, which is American, unlike in other places.”

Rock said he normally likes to keep his musical performances apolitical, but he said he's so committed to Trump and Trump's agenda that he'll be holding a series of concerts that will essentially become “Maga Rally.” He also expressed his hope that Vice President JD Vance will replace Trump in 2028.

However, Locke and Beck did not limit their argument to politics. In fact, they spent a lot of time discussing traditional American culture, particularly mysticism in the American West.

“There's something in the West, which is American unlike anywhere else,” claimed Beck, who grew up in Washington.

Lock agreed, claiming that the sturdy cowboy is a distinctive American figure. “It's like it's embedded in our culture and America owns it.

“It's the best movie. Whether it's a campfire song, a cowboy or an Indian, whatever it is, it's definitely hard – whether it's the coolest American thing ever, it's the best story.”

Growing up in the countryside north of Detroit, Locke clearly embraces the image of a cowboy. He joined forces with the professional Bull Rider League to present Kid Rock's Rock'n' Rodeo“A revolutionary new rodeo event during the PBR World Finals.”

Both Lock and Beck agreed that the rodeo lifestyle was “bad.”

“It's one of the toughest sports,” Locke said. “They're just tough people.”

Beck admitted that after making the mistake of being rarely likened to a rodeo clown, he came to appreciate the toughness of the rodeo personality.

“I remember being on CNN, and I called myself a rodeo clown: “I'm just a rodeo clown” – …The president of the Rodeo clown, wrote to me, “Do you know about rodeo clown?” do? “And I said, “OK, you're right. You're right.' I mean, that's really bad.”

In the nearly hour-long chat, Rock and Beck were exposed to other subjects including Cybertrack, Diddy, Ticketmaster issues, and how Gen X X saves us all from “American theft.” Watch the full episode ofGlenbeck Program“Click to feature Kidlock podcast here.

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