HOLLYWOOD ON EDGE: “Non-Woke Productions” Sparks Real Studio Panic Hollywood is quietly rattled after Roseanne Barr, Mark Wahlberg, and Mel Gibson joined forces to launch Non-Woke Productions — an independent studio designed to operate entirely outside the traditional gatekeeper system. No approvals. No rewrites for “safety.” No compromises. Insiders claim several of the studio’s first projects were rejected by major networks despite strong commercial potential. One historical film is described as uncomfortably honest. A sitcom reportedly breaks every modern content rule. What’s alarming executives isn’t just the material — it’s the model. Private funding. Direct distribution. Zero reliance on studio permission. If it works, it threatens more than trends — it challenges who actually holds power in Hollywood. The question now isn’t whether they’ll go through with it. It’s whether audiences are ready for a no-permission era of storytelling…
In a move that has Hollywood insiders rattled and grassroots audiences fired up, the iconic Roseanne Barr, along with her classic sitcom co-stars John Goodman and Laurie Metcalf, has joined forces with Mark Wahlberg and Mel Gibson to create what they’re calling “Non-Woke Productions” — a new film and TV studio promising to shake the industry to its core.

The message is loud, clear, and unapologetic: It’s time for Hollywood to grow a spine.
The Dream Team No One Expected — But Everyone’s Talking About
The newly formed alliance between five of entertainment’s most recognizable (and at times controversial) figures is being hailed by supporters as a “cultural revolution,” and criticized by others as “a direct challenge to the entertainment establishment.”
Dubbed the “Roseanne Trio” by fans for their legacy in the blue-collar sitcom Roseanne, Barr, Goodman, and Metcalf are now stepping back into the spotlight — not just as actors, but as cultural renegades determined to revive a type of storytelling many believe has been buried under layers of political correctness.
Joining them are Mark Wahlberg, who has long expressed frustration with Hollywood’s moral hypocrisy, and Mel Gibson, no stranger to controversy himself but also a proven box-office titan when it comes to bold, unfiltered content.



