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Hey, Cracker Barrel! Drag Queens Don’t Eat Sausage Biscuits and Grits

Ildar Sagdejev (Specious), CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons

 

The after-church crowd once flocked to Cracker Barrel for traditional, heart-stopping comfort foods like chicken fried steak, served in a setting filled with rustic, down-home décor. But Cracker Barrel seems to have forgotten who its customer base was.

The company has redesigned its interiors, stripping away much of the nostalgia and replacing it with a brighter, more modern look.

The chain also abandoned its iconic 48-year-old logo featuring a man sitting by a barrel, opting instead for a simplified design that contains neither a cracker nor a barrel. Like other companies that turned their backs on their core customers in the name of being “woke,” Cracker Barrel is learning that alienating longtime patrons doesn’t win over new ones.

The woke crowd isn’t suddenly going to start eating biscuits and gravy at a rebranded Cracker Barrel.

Longtime customer Rachel Love, whose viral TikTok sparked the controversy, said the changes stripped the restaurant of its character. Other loyal customers echoed these frustrations online, saying Cracker Barrel now feels more like a generic diner, and some vowed not to return unless older locations are preserved. Vietnam veteran Joseph Crawford added, “It takes away from heritage. When you’re 81 years old, you kind of remember the way the place started. And this has taken away from it.”

Byron Donalds declared, “No one asked for this woke rebrand” and added, “It’s time to Make Cracker Barrel Great Again,” in posts viewed over 3 million times. Activist Robby Starbuck summed up the sentiment of many critics, saying Americans are “sick of having our culture and heritage stripped from us.”

Cracker Barrel defended its rebrand, insisting that most feedback has been positive and that the remodels were based on guest input, though it acknowledged there is “a vocal minority” opposed to the changes. The company is clearly delusional because none of their original customers are going to like the changes.

The controversy has also reignited scrutiny of Cracker Barrel’s history with the Human Rights Campaign’s Corporate Equality Index (CEI), which measures workplace policies and benefits for LGBTQ+ employees. When the index debuted in 2002, Cracker Barrel received a score of zero. Later that year, the chain added “sexual orientation” to its list of protected characteristics in its employment discrimination policy. Over the next two decades, its score steadily improved, reaching 80 in 2021 after the company took several high-profile pro-LGBT positions.

This long engagement with HRC marked a dramatic shift for a brand once viewed as conservative. Although Cracker Barrel now says it has not participated in the CEI “for several years,” conservative activist Robby Starbuck points to this history as proof that the company has drifted away from the values of its traditional base.

Shares of Cracker Barrel (CBRL) tumbled more than 12% on Thursday, its steepest drop since April, before closing down over 7%. The decline erased more than $90 million in market value and reinforced the “go woke, go broke” narrative.

This easily avoidable demise of an established brand reflects a broader pattern of conservative consumers revolting against companies they see as abandoning traditional values. The most prominent example was Bud Light in 2023, when a promotion featuring transgender influencer Dylan Mulvaney sparked a boycott that wiped out roughly 24% of its sales and toppled it from its position as the nation’s top beer within just two months.

Target also faced boycotts in 2023 for selling LGBTQ-themed merchandise, including items aimed at children. The controversy led to a 5.4% drop in sales, and the company responded by pulling some products.

Disney went woke by pushing LGBTQ+ content in children’s movies, feminizing male characters, promoting anti-marriage messaging, and taking progressive political stands. The result: box office bombs like Lightyear and Strange World lost $300 million, massive boycotts tanked their stock, and they were forced into 7,000 layoffs and CEO changes.

Jaguar had an epic fail in 2024 with an ad campaign that emphasized diversity and inclusivity without showing any cars. Conservative critics mocked it as “Bud Light 2.0” and sales collapsed.  European registrations plunged 97.5% in April 2025 compared to the year before. The fallout contributed to 500 management job cuts and the early retirement of Jaguar Land Rover’s CEO.

In 2018, Levi Strauss supported gun control efforts with major philanthropic donations, and in 2023 it launched LGBTQ+ campaigns featuring gender-fluid fashion. CEO Chip Bergh admitted, “It’s inevitable that we’re going to alienate some consumers,” but insisted companies must take stands on issues that matter.

Most critics believe the real question for Cracker Barrel is whether the company can repair its bond with customers who valued its nostalgic, family-oriented identity. But a far more realistic question is whether Cracker Barrel is willing to admit it made a mistake and return to an image that preserves its core customer base. If not, this could mark the end of Cracker Barrel, because drag queens don’t eat sausage biscuits and grits.

The post Hey, Cracker Barrel! Drag Queens Don’t Eat Sausage Biscuits and Grits appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.