Home Flashbox

The Many Cancellations of Elvis Presley

Baz Luhrmann’s biopic has everyone talking about the King — and on TikTok, Gen Z is calling him out

Published by

Unless you’ve been living under a rock, you’re probably well aware that Baz Luhrmann’s flashy Elvis biopic was released this week. It’s been hard to ignore the film’s major marketing push over the past month: a long standing ovation at Cannes, TikTok-creator sponsored content, a Doja Cat soundtrack cut, and the campaign to make Carrie Diaries star Austin Butler into a Brad Pitt-style heartthrob.

In the thick of the promotion, the marketing push has led to re-fascination with Elvis Presley himself. Public interest had notably waned in the past couple decades. In a Rolling Stone piece two years ago, the King’s estate had been cooking up many ideas on how to rebuild slipping revenue streams and spark public interest in the star once more. Much like Bohemian Rhapsody had done for energizing Gen Z Queen/Freddie Mercury stans, they were probably banking on Elvis doing the same for another historical rock figure.

This week’s episode of Don’t Let This Flop points out that the plan might be backfiring, largely for the same reasons that made interest in Elvis slip initially. On TikTok, there are plenty of videos and explainers about Elvis, but most grapple with the reality of his life that makes them uncomfortable with a movie celebrating him in the first place. The dude was Black culture appropriation Ground Zero, profiting off the Black dancing styles and music he used to launch his own career (though some to most claims of him being actively racist were debunked in his lifetime). 

Plus, there’s the Priscilla of it all: there’s no shaking the queasiness that comes with the development of his relationship with his only wife. The pair met when she was 14 and he was 24. By the actual definition of “grooming” (not the TikTok-washed idea that all age gap couples count), he basically trained her to be his teenage bride, making her wear the hair, make-up, and clothing styles he liked. 

Some of the TikTok videos pointing this out are funny only in the way that they think they are canceling Elvis for the very first time. The thing is, Elvis has been canceled. Millennials and younger Gen Xers have long held opinions on the rock & roll star as a problematic touchstone in musical history, leaving him with a complicated legacy over the years.

Elvis, his death by constipation, and Austin Butler’s confusing Southern accent are all discussed on this week’s episode of Don’t Let This Flop, why you should never let TikTok convince you to sell feet pics on FeetFinder, whether or not pandas are real, and whether Chris Evans is making Boston, of all places, seem cool.

DLTF is released Wednesdays on all audio streaming platforms, including Apple PodcastsSpotifyAmazon MusicStitcher and more.

From Rolling Stone US.

Recent Posts

A$AP Rocky Debuts New Song While Performing From a Helicopter

On Saturday, the rapper headlined his first show since being acquitted on two firearm assault…

March 17, 2025

Kanye West Drops Diddy Song With Daughter North After Dispute With Kim Kardashian Over Release

Kanye West dropped a new song via X on Saturday that he said is by Sean “Diddy”…

March 17, 2025

30 Years Later, the RPG Perfection of ‘Chrono Trigger’ Is Impossible to Replicate

With an all-star team of talent behind its design and artwork, the 1995 Super Nintendo…

March 17, 2025

Lady Gaga’s ‘Mayhem’ Tops the Albums Chart

The star’s seventh Number One-bowing album also marks her biggest debut on streaming

March 17, 2025

Rohit Kulkarni Talks New Prog Single ‘Running Away’

Mumbai-based, New Delhi-bred artist follows up his previous single ‘Time Always Flies,’ which was released…

March 16, 2025

A.R. Rahman Discharged After Brief Hospitalization in Chennai

Singer-composer was admitted to a private hospital on Mar. 16, 2025 for dehydration symptoms

March 16, 2025