Kid Rock has been getting a lot of hate recently—and no small amount of ridicule. He was the headline act at TPUSA’s alternative “all-American” halftime event for Super Bowl LX.
Even Fox News gently suggested that Kid Rock’s schtick—or at least his voice—is getting a little long in the tooth.
First things first. According to the internet, Kid Rock’s net worth, as of early 2026, is around $150 million. Do you have $150 million in cash and assets? I certainly don’t.
Kid Rock is a 55-year-old man who has achieved worldwide fame and fortune (what else do you call $150 million?) doing what he loves. He didn’t have to spend 30 years toiling away within the bowels of a corporate hellhole to make all that money. This alone makes him demonstrably more competent than 99.999% of the population.
On the personal front, Kid Rock married Pamela Anderson back when Pamela Anderson was still a universal object of male fantasy. No—his marriage to Pamela Anderson didn’t last. But so what? That’s the way celebrity marriages typically go.
When Kid Rock had his heyday in the early 2000s, I was in my early thirties. I had recently reached the point where I had decided that I no longer needed to keep up with popular music.
This had been a long time coming. I was a big fan of the pop and metal acts of the 1980s. Then the 1990s gave way to grunge, R&B, and rap—none of which interested me very much.
But Kid Rock caught my attention. Perhaps because—like me—he came from a Midwestern background that is a little rough around the edges. I emphasize edges here. I grew up in relative comfort near Cincinnati, Ohio. Kid Rock, though he presents himself as a streetwise Detroiter, grew up in the suburban enclave of Romeo, Michigan. Kid Rock’s father owned multiple car dealerships.
I remember purchasing Kid Rock’s 2000 compilation album, The History of Rock, at my local Kmart in 2001. At this time, most music was still purchased on CD, and the CD is probably still in a box in my basement.
I found one or two of Kid Rock’s songs to be catchy. I rather liked “American Bad Ass”, and its accompanying music video. This was a song that glorified white working-class culture, back when no one else was doing that.
But Kid Rock was always a one-trick pony. His music never evolved beyond “American Bad Ass”. That same message, while fresh the first time you hear it, gets old after repeated playings.
America has changed since 2001, too. It might have been reasonable to assert that the white working class lacked a voice in the pop culture of 2001. That argument is harder to make today, in the second administration of Donald Trump.
Then Kid Rock went overtly, loudly political. A certain anti-elitism was always an ingredient in his music; but the specific politics were left to the listener’s interpretation in his earlier work. Now Kid Rock has become so closely identified with one political faction, that to declare oneself a Kid Rock fan is to declare one’s politics.
Like most celebrities who use their artistic platform for bait-and-switch politicking, Kid Rock is neither articulate nor original as a political analyst/commentator. Listening to Kid Rock decry the liberals is no more interesting than listening to Robert DeNiro and Cher trash Trump. No more enlightening than listening to Alyssa Milano prattle on about abortion.
It may be possible for an artist to hold public opinions about politics. But when a creative entertainer reaches a point where he becomes obsessed with politics, the politics inevitably take over the art, and the art degenerates into agitprop.
Evidence of just how far Kid Rock has fallen can be found in the video for his 2022 release, “Don’t Tell Me How to Live”. The song consists mostly of a stream of f-bombs, hurled at establishment and media liberals.
The high point of Kid Rock’s alternative Super Bowl performance was his rendition of “Till You Can’t”, a touching song originally performed by country music singer Cody Johnson.
The problem is…Cody Johnson does a much better job of performing the song. Kid Rock was never beloved for the raw quality of his voice. The appeal of Kid Rock was always in his persona, and now that persona seems like a relic from 2001.
There is a lesson here for all politically motivated artists. Speak out on important issues, if you must. But never mistake political expression for artistic expression. No one listens to political diatribes for entertainment, even if those diatribes are set to music.
-ET