Gina Carano to produce, star in right-wing website film: ‘They can’t cancel us if we don’t let them’

If you were expecting an apology from Gina Carano over her latest controversy, think again.

If you were expecting an apology from [autotag]Gina Carano[/autotag] over her latest controversy, think again.

Carano, who was fired from her starring role in “The Mandalorian,” has signed on for a producing and starring role in a new movie project backed by conservative website The Daily Wire.

In a statement obtained by Deadline, Carano expressed elation for the opportunity – but also defiance against anyone responsible for reigniting the #FireGinaCarano hashtag that led to her dismissal by Lucasfilm Ltd.

“The Daily Wire is helping make one of my dreams – to develop and produce my own film – come true,” Carano said. “I cried out and my prayer was answered. I am sending out a direct message of hope to everyone living in fear of cancellation by the totalitarian mob. I have only just begun using my voice which is now freer than ever before, and I hope it inspires others to do the same. They can’t cancel us if we don’t let them.”

Earlier this week, Carano’s since-deleted post fueled the #FireGinaCarano hashtag, which trended worldwide on Twitter. Carano shared a social media post in which she suggested Republicans living in President Joe Biden’s America are being persecuted the same as Holocaust victims in Nazi Germany.

“Jews were beaten in the streets, not by Nazi soldiers but by their neighbors…even by children,” Carano wrote on her IG story, accompanied by a sad face emoji.

Carano also offered up the following words in quotation marks:

“Because history is edited, most people today don’t realize that to get to the point where Nazi soldiers could easily round up thousands of Jews, the government first made their own neighbors hate them simply for being Jews. How is that any different from hating someone for their political views?”

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That created a firestorm on social media and eventually led to Carano’s firing from “The Mandalorian,” in which she starred as Cara Dune for the first two seasons of the popular “Star Wars” franchise on Disney+.

Carano is no stranger to controversy on social media. The hashtag #FireGinaCarano trended last November after she openly questioned the presidential election that Biden won against Donald Trump and the validity of the COVID-19 pandemic by sharing a series of anti-mask posts.

Carano has been known to spread the message of far-right conspiracy group QAnon. She’s also faced backlash for mocking gender pronoun preferences.

Carano, a pioneer of women’s MMA, made history on in 2007 when she and Julie Kedzie competed in the first women’s MMA fight to air on live national television at “EliteXC: Destiny.” Carano made history again a little more than two years later when she and Cris Cyborg became the first women to headline a major MMA promotion’s event under the Strikeforce banner.

That fight, a first-round TKO loss on Aug. 15, 2009, was Carano’s last. She transitioned into a full-time acting career afterward.

Daily Wire co-founder Ben Shapiro had this to say in a statement to Deadline:

“We could not be more excited to be working with Gina Carano, an incredible talent dumped by Disney and Lucasfilm for offending the authoritarian Hollywood Left,” it read. “This is what Daily Wire exists to do: provide an alternative not just for consumers, but for creators who refuse to bow to the mob.

“We’re eager to bring Gina’s talent to Americans who love her, and we’re just as eager to show Hollywood that if they want to keep canceling those who think differently, they’ll just be helping us build the Xwing to take down their Death Star.”

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#FireGinaCarano reignites after ‘Mandalorian’ star likens Republicans to Holocaust victims

For the second time, #FireGinaCarano trended worldwide in response to her controversial social media posting.

Calls for MMA legend [autotag]Gina Carano[/autotag] to be fired from her starring role in “The Mandalorian” reignited Wednesday.

The hashtag #FireGinaCarano trended on social media after Carano, 38, shared a post in which she suggested that Republicans in President Joe Biden’s America are being persecuted the same as Holocaust victims in Nazi Germany.

“Jews were beaten in the streets, not by Nazi soldiers but by their neghbors…even by children,” Carano wrote on her IG story, accompanied by a sad face emoji.

Carano also offered up the following words in quotation marks:

“Because history is edited, most people today don’t realize that to get to the point where Nazi soldiers could easily round up thousands of Jews, the government first made their own neighbors hate them simply for being Jews. How is that any different from hating someone for their political views?”

Carano has since deleted the post, but it was screen-grabbed and spread across social media platforms, including Twitter. She has not apologized nor acknowledged the controversy publicly.

Carano is no stranger to controversy on social media. The hashtag #FireGinaCarano trended last November after she openly questioned the presidential election that Biden won against Donald Trump and the validity of the COVID-19 pandemic by sharing a series of anti-mask posts.

Carano has been known to spread the message of far-right conspiracy group QAnon. She’s also faced backlash for mocking gender pronoun preferences.

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Carano, a pioneer of women’s MMA, made history on this day in 2007 when she and Julie Kedzie competed in the first women’s MMA fight to air on live national television at “EliteXC: Destiny.” Carano made history again a little more than two years later when she and Cris Cyborg became the first women to headline a major MMA promotion’s event under the Strikeforce banner.

That fight, a first-round TKO loss on Aug. 15, 2009, was Carano’s last. She transitioned into a full-time acting career afterward.

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Fight Game on the ‘Gram: Gina Carano’s best posts

Check out some of Gina Carano’s most popular Instagram posts.

Social media is part of life in the fight game for most fighters. Many of them turn to Instagram to keep their fans and followers informed and entertained since (for now) its reputation is less vitriolic than some of its contemporaries.

Check out some of the most popular Instagram posts from former MMA standout and current film and TV star [autotag]Gina Carano[/autotag] over the past year.

Carano is back in the news lately, not just because she’s back on screen in Season 2 of the highly regarded Star Wars series “The Mandalorian” on Disney+, but because of a Twitter account that is filled with inflammatory posts and rhetoric that led to a trending #FireGinaCarano hashtag.

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People want Gina Carano fired from ‘The Mandalorian’ for tweets on election, COVID-19, more

Gina Carano has been promoting conspiracy theories on social media and is hearing about it from fans.

“The Mandalorian” star [autotag]Gina Carano[/autotag] finds herself at the center of a social media firestorm, with many fans outraged by her recent views expressed in various tweets about the presidential election, COVID-19, and more.

It got to the point that on late Saturday night, #FireGinaCarano was trending on Twitter.

Carano, 38, has questioned the results of the presidential election since it took place Nov. 4, echoing President Donald Trump’s baseless claims of voter fraud.

We need to clean up the election process so we are not left feeling the way we do today.
Put laws in place that protect us against voter fraud.
Investigate every state.
Film the counting.
Flush out the fake votes.
Require ID.
Make Voter Fraud end in 2020.
Fix the system. 🇺🇸

Carano, a pioneer of women’s MMA, also has openly questioned the validity of the coronavirus pandemic, which is responsible for 245,000 deaths in the U.S. and growing, drumming up conspiracy theories.

On Saturday night, she encouraged her 449,000 followers to join her on Parler, which is described this way on Wikipedia:

Parler is an American microblogging and social networking service launched in August 2018. Parler has a significant user base of Trump supporters, conservatives, and right-wing extremists. Posts on the service often contain far-right content, antisemitism, and conspiracy theories.

Here’s a sampling of the outrage being expressed on Twitter:

The Blue Corner is MMA Junkie’s blog space. We don’t take it overly serious, and neither should you. If you come complaining to us that something you read here is not hard-hitting news, expect to have the previous sentence repeated in ALL CAPS.

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Gina Carano speaks out after Instagram removes nude photo: ‘Censored for no reason’

Gina Carano says Instagram missed the entire point of her post being about freedom of expression.

Women’s MMA legend turned Hollywood star [autotag]Gina Carano[/autotag] doesn’t appreciate being censored by the powers that be, and she’s let it be known.

Carano over the weekend shared a nude image of herself on Instagram, but by Monday – two days after she posted it – the social media site took it down.

Accompanying Carano’s post was an inspirational quote attributed to music icon Prince: “I find freedom sexy. I find freedom so sexy, I can’t even explain it to you. You wake up every day and feel like you can do anything.” 

With the image and message both removed, Carano spoke out against Instagram’s decision on Twitter, calling it “some classic bullsh*t” and stressing that “the whole post about freedom of expression.”

“So that’s what it’s like to be censored for no reason,” she tweeted. “Pic was taken down by Instagram. There’s much more important news today but that was some classic bullsh*t. The whole post was about freedom of expression. Violating zero rules. Ironic. Feels like I graduated. Thanks Karen.”

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As for Carano’s claim that she violated “zero rules,” Instagram’s community guidelines page states the following when it comes to posting nude photos:

“We know that there are times when people might want to share nude images that are artistic or creative in nature, but for a variety of reasons, we don’t allow nudity on Instagram. This includes photos, videos, and some digitally-created content that show sexual intercourse, genitals, and close-ups of fully-nude buttocks. It also includes some photos of female nipples, but photos of post-mastectomy scarring and women actively breastfeeding are allowed. Nudity in photos of paintings and sculptures is OK, too.”

The picture, which can be viewed here, is of a mostly silhouetted Carano fully nude from the waist up while she holds her head back with her hair down.

Carano, 38, began her professional MMA career in June 2006 and became mainstream star despite never fighting in the UFC. She had her final fight in August 2009, losing to Cris Cyborg under the now-defunct Strikeforce banner. Carano transitioned into acting shortly after and has appeared in films such as “Haywire,” “Fast and Furious 6,” “Deadpool,” and most recently had a starring role in the Star Wars series “The Mandalorian” on Disney+.

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April Fools’ Day 2020: MMA community lightens mood through humor, pranks

April Fools’ Day has become notorious for faux fight announcements, bad fighter pranks, and more.

April Fools’ Day is once again upon us.

If you’re not skeptical of any and all news you read on April 1, you’ll likely fall into a trap. It’s easy to do so.

With the coronavirus situation having most of the world on quarantine, lockdown, or both, the MMA community went a little lighter than past years. However, there were still plenty of “jokes” to go around.

Below, check out some of the MMA community’s best social media posts from April Fools’ Day 2020.

View this post on Instagram

We have a baby! April Fools Day! But no for real we have a baby! @_kydavis started having contractions around midnight, we got to hospital around 4am and Detroit Ryan Davis was born at 9:31am! He is a BIG and healthy boy! 8lbs 10oz. First I want to give props to ANY & ALL mother’s out there! Child Birth is amazing, beautiful, & terrifying all in one! Kylie did amazing and is doing great! Detroit latched on to mommas 🥛 right away.. He has huge hands & feet and favors DK mostly. But has blonde/sandy brown hair! His middle name is for my brother(his uncle) and he was born the same day as Ryan’s first born, Kimora Rhyan Lynn. (Happy Birthday Kimora) We are so blessed and thankful God is good! 👶❤️🙏

A post shared by LC Davis (@lc_davis) on

 

Was Gina Carano more important than Ronda Rousey to women’s MMA?

Ronda Rousey ultimately was the reason why women’s MMA would exist in the UFC, but it couldn’t have been possible without Gina Carano.

Before [autotag]Ronda Rousey[/autotag], there was [autotag]Gina Carano[/autotag]. And before Carano, there were other talented female mixed martial artists. But until Carano hit the scene – when she took part in the first sanctioned women’s MMA fight in Nevada in June 2006 – there wasn’t a female fighter quite like her.

Carano was the first breakthrough star of women’s MMA. She was the perfect combination of beauty and badass, which captured the attention of the mainstream during an era when women’s MMA wasn’t so widely accepted. From 2006 until August 2009, when she lost her final bout against Cris Cyborg under the now-defunct Strikeforce banner, Carano was the poster girl for the sport.

An entire generation of fans might not realize this, but without her there probably isn’t women’s MMA in the UFC.

“First women’s MMA fight I ever saw was her and Julie Kedzie,” Rousey said in 2015 during UFC 184 media day. “I would not have even known (MMA) was an option for me. She’s the one that planted the seed in my head.”

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Rousey’s professional debut was in March 2011. In a sense, she was Carano 2.0. She demanded the attention of the mainstream for the same reasons. With time, UFC president Dana White couldn’t ignore Rousey: She was the reason he’d finally allow women to fight in his promotion in 2013. From there, Rousey went on an incredible run to become the UFC’s biggest star before it all came to a stunning end.

These days, Carano and Rousey have found success and happiness outside of MMA – both in acting, but Rousey also as a WWE superstar. Nevertheless, their impact on the sport is undeniable.

Our question for you is this: Who was more important to women’s MMA? You can answer in the poll below:

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Gina Carano handled Dana White’s bully negotiating ‘the way she should,’ says John McCarthy

“That’s the kind of person she is, and that’s the way she should be.”

[autotag]Ronda Rousey[/autotag] vs. [autotag]Gina Carano[/autotag] almost happened and probably would have if not for, according to Carano, UFC president Dana White’s bully negotiating.

Earlier this week, Carano, the first breakthrough star of women’s MMA, appeared on “Ariel Helwani’s MMA Show” and explained how White and Co. approached her about the opportunity for a comeback fight against Rousey, which would have been a superfight at the time. Carano said she verbally agreed to do it for $1 million, but she had just one request: “You got to be able to just sit on this for about six months, Dana.”

Since she hadn’t fought in a few years, Carano wanted time to find a gym and get situated for a proper training camp before news of a potential fight went public. White apparently agreed to oblige. But the next day, Carano said she was taken aback by the UFC boss sharing details with the media.

The situation got worse when White sent Carano a text message calling her a “bitch” that she didn’t believe was meant for her to receive. When she replied back, White apparently doubled down and said it was. That was the end negotiations.

On a Tuesday edition of the “Weighin In” podcast with Josh Thomson, Bellator analyst John McCarthy, a former referee who worked UFC events many times, sided with Carano for how she handled the situation.

“Gina is … she’s a different person,” McCarthy said. “She’s very shy. She’s very quiet. She’s got her people that she talks to, and she wasn’t happy about it. … “That’s the kind of person she is, and that’s the way she should be.

She should not take abuse from anybody over anything when it comes to the negotiation of a fight. She had agreed to something; (the UFC) had agreed to something; and someone didn’t hold up their end of the agreement. And then they’re upset about the fact that someone’s not being helpful to them when they haven’t held up their end of the agreement. That’s what happens.”

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Carano, whose professional MMA career began in June 2006, had her last fight in August 2009, losing to Cris Cyborg under the now-defunct Strikeforce banner. Carano transitioned into acting shortly after and has appeared in just films as “Haywire,” “Fast and Furious 6,” “Deadpool,” and most recently the Star Wars miniseries “The Mandalorian” on Disney+.

Carano said she’s had other opportunities to return to fighting, but her acting career has taken precedent.

“I think about it (return to fighting) every single time I hit the heavy bag. I think about it,” Carano said. “But if you were to ask me if I had the decision today, I would chose a movie, because that’s where my heart is, and that’s where I want to be, and I hope that maybe someday. I mean, if I really wanted to fight, I can pick up a fight in England or Thailand in muay Thai and get it out of my system. But for right now, I’m working on a script. I’m working on this other giant that’s become my fight now.”

Gina Carano says UFC offered $1 million to fight Ronda Rousey, explains why negotiations failed

Gina Carano says UFC offered her $1 million to fight Ronda Rousey, and explained how an accidental insulting text from Dana White derailed things.

The idea of a superfight between [autotag]Ronda Rousey[/autotag] and [autotag]Gina Carano[/autotag] was at some point a plan, at least according to Carano.

The first breakthrough star of women’s MMA and Hollywood star revealed to ESPN on Monday that the UFC had offered her $1 million to fight then-undefeated UFC bantamweight champion Ronda Rousey. The fight between the two easily could’ve been one of the biggest fights in MMA history with Rousey (12-2, 6-2 UFC) and Carano (7-1) being household names in the sport each in their respective eras.

“When Ronda Rousey became popular,  I remember they (Dana White and Lorenzo Fertitta – former UFC owners) had finally called for a meeting and I walked in this restaurant and they looked like these two big muscly guys at the table in like the middle of Hollywood,” Carano said. “I remember thinking, ‘What took you guys so long, I’ve been, what took you so long.’ So they were like, ‘Okay we’d love to offer you a million dollars, we’d love to have that fight,’ and I was like, ‘Well, that sounds great but I’m going to need you to do me a favor, then, because I’ve been acting, I’m not active in any gym so it’s going to take me, you know, you re going to have to give me some time to build a team or join a team.’”

“And it’s not an easy thing, as I’m sure all the fighters know,” Carano continued. “You have to find a team or build one that’s going to be into what you’re doing and if you haven’t actively been a part of anything, you can walk in as Gina Carano or whoever but you’re still going to have to find the people who are really going to be there for you and that takes time. So I told them, ‘You got to be able to just sit on this for about six months, Dana. You can’t say anything and let me get situated with that and when because that sounds great and I’d love to do it.’ So it was a nice dinner and we all left positive, I left stoked, and I was like, ‘OK, well this makes sense, this is my moment to come and be back in there.”

Despite thinking the stars had aligned for a potential long-awaited return to the  cage, things took an unexpected turn when UFC president Dana White discussed the comeback plans with the media.

“Then like the next day, Dana was out there talking about me, talking about my name, and telling people that he was going to sign me – and I don’t even have a team yet,” Carano explained. “I was like, ‘that’s not what we discussed; you were supposed to give me at least six months to kind of find a team.’ Then he started trying to put on the pressure through the media, and it was a bummer because I told him over text message that’s not what we talked about, I need time, now I’m going to walk into a gym and people are going to know that’s what I’m doing. I need to build trust if I’m going to find people.

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“So then he kept on doing that and I was still kind of searching for a team and feeling all that pressure and then he sent me a text message saying, ‘this (expletive) is something like (expletive) us around,’ something like that. And I sent a text message back and I sent, ‘I think you sent this out to the wrong person,’ and he said, ‘I don’t think I did’.

“That was the last conversation that we had over text message. Because I don’t think that was the kind of environment that I wanted to come back into, I cut all communication after that text. Then I remember seeing him when Mike Tyson and my dad were getting honored at a sports hall of fame in Las Vegas, and he did come over and genuinely apologized.

“But yeah, I just don’t think even a $1 million, you shouldn’t, when people hold money over your head, which they have done since I was a little girl, its just never been a turn-on for me. I don’t have a problem with authority; I just have a problem with abused authority and that’s my thing, so that was the end of that conversation.”

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The actor whose roles have included “Haywire,” “Fast and Furious 6,” and most recently Star Wars’ “Mandalorian” also revealed she could’ve gone elsewhere, citing both that she was a free agent and her good relationship with former Strikeforce and current Bellator president Scott Coker.

However, Carano’s passion for acting was much stronger than her passion for fighting.

“I had a fight and I had a movie (Deadpool), and I chose the movie,” Carano said. “That seems to be the way how things have gone.”

“I think about it (return to fighting) every single time I hit the heavy bag, I think about it,” Carano said. “But if you were to ask me if I had the decision today, I would chose a movie because that’s where my heart is and that’s where I want to be and I hope that maybe someday. I mean, if I really wanted to fight, I can pick up a fight in England or Thailand in muay Thai and get it out of my system. But for right now, I’m working on a script, I’m working on this other giant that’s become my fight now.”

Carano last fought in Aug. 2009, where she lost to Cris Cyborg for the inaugural Strikeforce women’s featherweight title in what was the first major MMA event headlined by a women’s bout. The TKO loss remains Carano’s only professional defeat.