Mick Jagger has yet to officially weigh in on Graham Platner.
The Rolling Stones legend also hasn’t expressed any hot takes about Tucker Carlson, New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani or Secretary of State Marco Rubio.
And, chances are, he never will.
The rock icon shared his approach to his craft with a New York Times interview. The podcast interview proved revealing in what Jagger won’t divulge despite the unwritten pressures of his celebrity class.
Just ask Dwayne Johnson. Silence is complicity, or so The Rock’s far-Left critics contend.
Jagger doesn’t care. He’ll never go the full Bruce Springsteen, apparently. If he hasn’t done so by 82, he likely never will.
The rocker opened up to The New York Times this week about his political musings or, more specifically, the lack thereof from the concert stage.
Mick Jagger Says It’s Not His Job to Lecture Rolling Stones’ Fans on Politics
NYT: “Bruce Springsteen clearly sees his job as engaging in a meaningful back and forth.”
MICK JAGGER: “My job in the live music world is for those people that come to have the best time … And you… pic.twitter.com/PmNaTgLjs7
— Chief Nerd (@TheChiefNerd) July 11, 2026
CREDIT: TheChiefNerd on X
The interviewer pressed Jagger on his relationship with his audience. It’s a good, potentially fruitful question, but it was intended to get Jagger’s political views.
Or, hopefully from the interviewer’s perspective, call out that Orange Mad Bad. Except Jagger didn’t take the bait.
The New York Times reporter called what Springsteen has done in recent years “a meaningful back and forth with his audience.”
Wrong.
Springsteen isn’t having a conversation with his audience. He isn’t debating them or answering their questions. It’s a lecture from a multi-millionaire who doesn’t have all the facts at his disposal.
And that’s on him.
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Jagger has a different goal when he steps on stage.
“My job in the live music world is [to make sure audiences] have the best time they possibly can for two hours, to forget all their problems and the problems of the world and their mortgages … it’s similar to going to a sports event,” Jagger said.
And, on occasion, “You encourage them to go more nuts.”
What won’t you hear at a Rolling Stones concert? Political talking points.
“You don’t want to lecture them,” he said of his patrons.
It’s not to say Jagger or his band mates have never gotten political or shared some points of view. Guitarist Keith Richards recently weighed in on the state of the world.
After being asked if The Rolling Stones’ new song, “Ringing Hollow,” is an anti-Trump track, Richards told Sunday Times that the lyrics are about having “a nostalgic love affair with America, and [it being] a bit of a disappointment at the moment.”
Suffice it to say, he isn’t pleased. Jagger also shared some murky thoughts about America then, and now, in the same interview.
Still, Jagger’s comments to The New York Times suggest he’s not about to turn a Rolling Stones concert into a political screed.
That’s exactly what Springsteen has done over the last few weeks with his No Kings-style tour.
Two rock legends. Two very different approaches to their fans.
The post Why Mick Jagger Will Never Go the Full Bruce Springsteen appeared first on Hollywood in Toto.
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