Film

Why is Kevin Spacey Hanging With Mexico’s Douchebag President?

In a deeply confusing gesture, Kevin Spacey has met in Cancun with Mexican president Enrique Peña Nieto, taking to social media to praise Peña Nieto’s “progress” during his first year in office.

While it may seem that Spacey was merely doing research for his universally acclaimed role as U.S. President and Machiavellian power-monger Frank Underwood on the Netflix original series, House of Cards, Peña Nieto’s reputation as a bumbling, inarticulate pretty-boy doesn’t quite match up to the calculation and astuteness of Spacey’s Underwood.

You might be wondering why we think EPN is a douche. Here are a couple reasons.

1. He wants to censor the internet.

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2. When he was governor of the State of Mexico he ordered a police raid to end protests happening in Atenco (a farming town outside Mexico City). As a result, two people died, hundreds were injured and imprisoned and several allegations surfaced later of police sexually abusing both men and women. EPN went on TV afterward saying that what was important was that peace was restored.

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3. Alfonso Cuaron, director of Gravity and the first Mexican to win a Best Director Oscar, is not a fan either. In an open letter to the president, he asked some pointed questions about the controversial energy reform bill EPN is trying to pass.

Forbes explains: In his “10 Questions to President of Mexico Enrique Peña Nieto from Mexican Citizen Alfonso Cuarón”, as the letter is titled, the filmmaker explains why he decided to write the president: In a TV interview in February, Peña Nieto said that Cuarón’s opposition to the energy reform was the result of disinformation or lack of information. “If I am not sufficiently informed, it is because the government you lead has not shared with me—with all of us Mexicans—crucial elements that are necessary for us to understand ‘the extent and significance of these reforms,’ he replied.

In EPN’s defense, he did write back to Cuaron but most internet pundits seem to agree that, “The official response to this question is vague and, especially, weak. Nothing is concrete in the governmental response. The bureaucratic language evades, it doesn’t confront.”

In general, the internet is pretty much unanimous in its contempt for the guy.

Update: The next day Kevin Spacey tweeted that it was all a joke.


Sure Kevin, we believe you. [sarcasm font]