Actor Mark Ruffalo Is Speaking Out After The Fatal Shooting Of Minnesota Mother Renee Good
- Jason Robinson

- Jan 12
- 2 min read
Updated: Jan 20

Hey fam — let’s talk about what went down that lit up Hollywood and Main Street all at once.
Picture this: Red carpet lights blazing, celebs walking into the Golden Globe Awards looking sharp — but one moment stopped the show before any trophy was handed out. That’s right… Mark Ruffalo — The Hulk himself — Hulk-energy-level pissed off — wasn’t there just to geek out over acting. Nah, he walked in wearing a pin that said “BE GOOD” — a simple phrase, a deep cut, a calling card straight for America’s conscience.
This wasn’t some movie-set political tweet. This was personal. This was real.
See, just days before the Globes, a 37-year-old Minnesota mom named Renee Good — a writer, artist, mother of three — was shot and killed by a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officer during a Minneapolis operation. Her death unleashed protests, nationwide grief, and a firestorm of debate about federal enforcement tactics.
And Mark Ruffalo? He didn’t stay quiet.
On the red carpet, Ruffalo made it clear — this was about more than awards season glam. He was there to say her name and pull the curtain back on an incident that’s now a touchpoint in an America split wide open. Wearing that “BE GOOD” pin wasn’t a fashion statement — it was a moral baton being passed to everyone watching.
He said it straight up: “This is for her.” Not some coded celeb speak — those are his words from social video of the moment.
And he’s not alone in ripping into this moment. Folks all over — comedians, actors, athletes — are speaking out. The Minnesota Timberwolves even held a moment of silence for Good before a game.
Now here’s where it gets real gritty: the political echoes are loud. Local leaders are clashing with federal authorities over what happened — with some calling the agent’s defense a fabrication and others standing by law enforcement.
And while conservative voices are defending ICE’s actions, Hollywood’s response — with Ruffalo at the front of it — feels like an emotional plea to America to wake up and choose humanity before headlines become history. Celebs like Wanda Sykes, Ariana Grande, and Jean Smart weren’t just showing up — they were showing out for her name and what her life represents in this moment.
So yeah… it’s The Hulk smashing metaphorical inertia, smashing silence, and smashing complacency — right in the center of a moment that has America trying to figure out what justice looks like now. And Ruffalo? He’s saying very plainly:
We don’t forget people. We don’t shrug. We speak. We act. We BE GOOD.
That’s his plea. That’s his vibe. And whether you agree with him or not — like it or hate it — the guy’s not playing for likes. He’s playing for conscience.
JAY ROB DISCUSSING THE MARK RUFFALO/RENEE GOOD COMMENTS



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