Brett Cooper has finally resurfaced after a mysterious hiatus following her sudden departure from The Daily Wire’s YouTube show, The Comments Section. And now? She’s back—this time with her own platform and a new show, The Brett Cooper Show, where she’s taking a full-throttle dive into conservatism.
Her debut episode, “Let’s Talk About Right-Wing Cancel Culture,” sounds like a warning, but to whom exactly? Cooper claims that conservatives risk becoming exactly what they oppose when they turn on their own over past mistakes. The message? Don’t gatekeep conservatism. But why now? Why this sudden call for unity?
One of her key examples? Comedian Whitney Cummings. Once a die-hard advocate for vaccines and progressive politics, Cummings has now pivoted away from “woke ideology.” Cooper argues that conservatives should welcome figures like her rather than hold her past beliefs against her.

“The correct and the good thing to do is to welcome people like Whitney Cummings and understand where they’re coming from and have empathy for the fact that, yeah, maybe it took them longer than some other people, but they finally got here,” Cooper insists.
But the real head-turner? Mark Zuckerberg. Yes, Meta’s CEO himself, the very man conservatives have long accused of silencing free speech, enforcing Big Tech censorship, and pushing leftist agendas. Now, according to Cooper, he’s had a change of heart—and we should take it seriously.
She acknowledges that Zuckerberg’s track record is suspect (an understatement), but urges conservatives to not dismiss the work he’s doing to roll back woke policies at Meta. A sudden shift away from DEI policies, a newfound resistance to government overreach… all just coincidence?
“With Zuckerberg’s track record, obviously we should be skeptical,” she admits. “But you also shouldn’t dismiss the work that he is doing that will make our lives better that will hopefully change the course of the media landscape.”
Cooper’s message is clear: be wary of canceling converts to conservatism. She even compares it to Christianity—arguing that, just as new believers shouldn’t be turned away, neither should public figures suddenly “seeing the light.”
But here’s the real question: Who is really benefiting from this narrative? Is this a genuine attempt at unity, or are we watching a carefully orchestrated rebranding effort for high-profile figures who suddenly find themselves on the wrong side of public sentiment? Cooper wants conservatives to be open to redemption. But redemption for whom—and at what cost?