Milly Alcock LEFT EMBARRASSED As Fans HUMILIATED Supergirl!?

This video explains why Milly Alcock became one of the most memed actresses of 2026 during the release of the DC Universe film Supergirl, and why the meme narrative that "audiences rejected her" does not match the box office and review data. Supergirl opened in theaters on June 26, 2026 as the second film in James Gunn and Peter Safran's rebooted DC Universe, with House of the Dragon star Milly Alcock in the lead. Almost immediately she was turned into a viral meme, first over a Supergirl poster and later over press-tour comments, a former Superman actor, and a cable news host. This video traces how that pile-on unfolded across TikTok and social media, then checks the actual Rotten Tomatoes scores, CinemaScore, and box office numbers to show that the loud online reaction and the paying audience's verdict were two completely different things. What's covered in this video: • How the meme wave started with a viral post questioning why a bulletproof Supergirl has pierced ears, and how it mutated into appearance jokes that spread across TikTok before the film even opened. • The press tour comments that escalated the backlash, including Alcock describing the film as not centered on a man, her loose answer about whether Kara reads as queer, and her Variety and SFX Magazine responses to critics. • Dean Cain's involvement, from his June reposts of the earring and appearance memes to his "Christian dad" podcast comments and his refusal to learn Alcock's name, and the split reaction to his behavior. • Megyn Kelly's on-air segment calling Alcock "loathsome," comparing her to Rachel Zegler, criticizing her height, and framing the film as a "forced-upon-us girlboss era." • The point that the film's no-romance plot faithfully adapts the Tom King and Bilquis Evely comic Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow, which predates the culture-war framing being applied to it. • The data the memes ignored, including a 77 percent Rotten Tomatoes audience score, a 57 to 58 percent critics score, and a B-minus CinemaScore from opening-weekend crowds. • The pattern of critics who panned the film while praising Alcock's performance, including The Hollywood Reporter, Empire, and ScreenRant. • The tracking data showing memes raised awareness of Supergirl without increasing interest in buying tickets, meaning the meme wave never functioned as an audience review. • The real reasons the film struggled, including a roughly 38 million dollar domestic opening, a worldwide debut near 68 million against a budget over 170 million, a second-place finish behind Toy Story 5, and a projected loss between 100 and 125 million dollars. • Fan and critic complaints aimed at the script, the direction, the villain, the action, and Gunn's greenlighting decisions rather than at Alcock herself. • The premium-format data, with roughly half of the opening gross coming from IMAX and large-format screens, indicating committed fans turned out while the casual four-quadrant audience did not. • DC Studios standing behind Alcock, with Peter Safran addressing the soft opening and Alcock confirmed to return as Supergirl in Man of Tomorrow in 2027 plus a reported third project. • The closing argument that a loud online spectacle was mistaken for a box-office verdict, and that the people generating the noise were not the people buying tickets. Follow Us On Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/officialbuz... 📺Subscribe now to catch every shocking Hollywood meltdown 🎵 / @OfficialBuzzline ​ #Supergirl #SupergirlReview #SupergirlTrailer #MillyAlcock DISCLAIMER: The content on this channel may contain gossip-based information, rumors, or exaggerated portrayals of reality. Please exercise your own discretion while watching and remember that not all information presented may be factual or verified