A new and viral political video featuring men declaring they are âman enoughâ to support Vice President Kamala Harrisâ presidential campaign is stacked with Hollywood actors and comedians.
A grassroots ad published last week by a former producer for Jimmy Kimmel has racked up millions of views on social media as critics lambaste the video supporting Harris as âthe cringiest political ad ever created.â The director behind the video said it was made for a group called Creatives for Harris, adding that even while the video is tongue in cheek, the message of the video âis true.â
The video was not authorized by any candidate or candidateâs committee, according to a disclaimer in the 90-second video, but is shot as if itâs an official campaign ad.
It features six alleged manly men who claim they are so masculine that they eat âcarburetors for breakfastâ and arenât âafraid of bears,â while saying they also donât fear women and will support Harris for the Oval Office.
âMAN ENOUGHâ VIDEO SUPPORTING HARRIS MOCKED AS âTHE CRINGIEST POLITICAL AD EVER CREATEDâ

Actors portraying Kamala Harris supporters in an ad attempting to appeal to men argue that voting for Vice President Kamala Harris is a great way to assert oneâs masculinity. (Jacob Reed YouTube channel)
The video was slammed by conservatives and other critics on social media, who questioned last week if the video was a parody and claimed Democrats âhave no idea how actual men speak.â
FOX Business senior correspondent Charles Gasparino, for example, remarked, âItâs so bizarre that those on the political left, who for years proselytized the hoi poi that men can be women and women can be men, that men can compete in womenâs sports because we are all genderless creatures, now think they have credibility to say what a real man is all about. Sorry you blew it years ago.â
âMust-see Kamala ad,â Claremont Institute fellow David Reaboi quipped. âNot only do they have no idea how actual men speak, they couldnât find any convincing male actors.â
The original YouTube page for the video details that the men who appear in the unofficial ad are cast members for the video, listing the actorsâ names: Winston Carter, Chris Gibson, Lanre Idewu, Tony Ketcham, Mike Leffingwell and Wayland McQueen.
Fox News Digital found IMDB pages for the actors, with most appearing in bit roles for Hollywood films or starring in low-budget films or short videos.
Winston Carter, the actor who played a heavyset man in a cowboy hat, for example, has performed in a handful of low-budget movies and short videos going back to 2011, according to his IMDB page. Actor Tony Ketcham, who plays the elderly man who is unashamed of his love of âWest Side Storyâ and support of Harris, also has an IMDB page showing credits for bit parts in movies such as âGhost World,â where he played the role of âalcoholic customerâ in the 2001 film, and an episode of the âX-Filesâ that same year.
Lanre Idewu, in the video, plays the gym-going guy who is âman enough to deadlift 500, and then braid the sâ out ofâ his daughterâs hair. He has an extensive IMDB page with credits from a 2006 episode of âArrested Developmentâ to working as a producer on a Christmas Hallmark movie. Idewu has also posted photos to his social media pages with Democratic elected officials, including President Biden and first lady Jill Biden.
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Two of the actors in the video are members of the Upright Citizens Brigade, an improvisational comedy group, in Los Angeles. Wayland McQueen played the role of a farming-type man surrounded by bales of hay and is listed as a current member of the comedy brigade, where heâs performed since 2008. Social media users who also investigated the actors in the ad found McQueen has reportedly tweeted about identifying and acknowledging âwhite privilege.â

An actor playing a man sharing his support for Vice President Kamala Harris. (Jacob Reed YouTube channel)
Mike Leffingwell, who declares in the unofficial campaign ad while standing next to a horse that heâs âsure as sâ not afraidâ of women, is another member of the Upright Citizens Brigade, according to the comedy groupâs website. His bio on the page reads, in part, Leffingwell âhas written cartoons for Dreamworks and Netflix, jokes for the Onion and The Late Late Show, and a series of Shorty Award-winning commercials for Tubi. On TV he has appeared on The Goldbergs, Conan, and commercials for many exciting products.â
The sixth man listed as an actor for the video, Chris Gibson, also appears to be an actor, with Fox Digital finding a handful of IMDB pages touting actors with that name, but could not confirm which allegedly belongs to the man in the ad.

Vice President Kamala Harris speaks at a campaign event on Thursday, Oct. 10, on the Gila River Indian Community reservation in Chandler, Ariz. (AP/Ross D. Franklin)
Some social media users pointed out over the weekend that the video featured actors playing manly men who support Harris, sparking a new round of criticisms online.
âThe campaign is so fake, they even have to fake the fake enthusiasm. Theyâre so bad at this. Do they honestly not know that The Google exists? Wow,â one X account posted in response to a thread detailing the actors in the video.
âThis explains why Progressives donât know what a real male is,â another posted.
âEverything they do is fake,â another said.
The ad was created by Jacob Reed, who has worked as director for âFunny or Dieâ and âJimmy Kimmel Live!â He told Fast Company last week that the ad ââwas made for Creatives for Harris, which is a grassroots group of producers, writers and ad executives who support Harris.

Vice President Kamala Harris and Gov. Tim Walz ( Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)
Reed wrote on Substack that the video is âmore sketch comedy than political ad,â before adding that âwhat these men are saying is true.â
âWith the rise of role models like Tim Walz and Doug Emhoff on the national stage, I think the left is finally finding its footing on how to talk about masculinity â I think weâre overdue for a redefinition of what it means to be a man in America and I hope this campaign can start to shape that conversation. Because even though itâs more sketch comedy than political ad, what these men are saying is true â except being afraid of bears. A bear will straight-up kill you,â Reed posted, describing those who worked on the project as âvolunteers.â
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Fox News Digital attempted to contact the actors via their social media accounts or by email on Sunday, but did not immediately receive replies. Fox News Digital also reached out to Reed by email, but did not receive a response.
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