Beyoncé Fans Race to Her Defense After Megyn Kelly Rips Into the Singer


Beyoncé has got the country world standing in formation with her latest album, “Act II: Cowboy Carter,” making history as the first Black woman to claim the top spot on the Billboard Country Albums chart.

This achievement adds to her being one of the most successful recording artists in history, as the album also soared to No. 1 on the all-genres Billboard 200, marking her eighth consecutive chart-topping album.

Those aren’t the album’s only acclaims. On its release day, March 29, Spotify reported that “Act II: Cowboy Carter” broke records as the platform’s most-streamed album in a single day in 2024 thus far. Furthermore, the album set a new benchmark on Amazon Music, boasting the highest number of first-day streams for a country album by a female artist.

Still, the haters are going to hate. Far-right news commentator Megyn Kelly appeared on screen with Sky News host Paul Murray, where she discounted the Houston native’s achievements and blasted her for making music that is contrary to modern feminism.

Beyoncé's Beehive defend her against Megyn Kelly's rant about her "Cowboy Carter" album. Beyoncé's Beehive defend her against Megyn Kelly's rant about her "Cowboy Carter" album.
Beyoncé’s Beehive defend her against Megyn Kelly’s rant about her “Cowboy Carter” album. (Photos: @beyonce/Instagram; @megynkelly/Instagram)

Out of the gate, she barked, “She’s not a queen — people like her music, she sings some good music, that’s it. She didn’t cure cancer.”

“Country music’s been around for a long, long time. It goes right to the heart of America, and most Americans in red states have been loving and enjoying it long before ‘Queen Bey’ decided to stick her big toe into the lane,” said Kelly, the host of a self-titled news show, before adding, “She makes an album, which, of course, because she’s queen has got the thumbs-up and promotion from Michelle Obama, from Vice President Kamala Harris.”

Then she shifted her attention to one song in particular, her interpretation of Dolly Parton’s “Jolene,” a two-time Grammy-nominated song ranked in Rolling Stone’s “The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.”

“She [Beyoncé] turned Jolene into her version of a bada– because that’s what modern-day feminism looks like,” Kelly scoffed.

Lyrics in the “Cowboy Carter” version of the song differ from the original song in tone and vibrato. The original song, written by Parton, begs a woman not to take her man because she can do so.

Bey’s version warns the woman that she is working in vain to come for her man because they have a foundation and Jolene really doesn’t want any “smoke.”

Parton posted on her Instagram her approval of the changes, writing, “Wow, I just heard Jolene. Beyoncé is giving that girl some trouble and she deserves it!”