Drew Barrymore

Drew Barrymore got her start early on, with her first role in Steven Spielberg’s “E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial” when she was seven years old. Since then, she’s been in nearly every genre of film imaginable, from “Charlie’s Angels” to “Olive, the Other Reindeer” and “50 First Dates.” Her directorial debut was “The Best Place to Start,” a 2004 documentary encouraging youth voters to impact the election. She was a strong supporter of President Obama and was a spokesperson for PETA until they parted ways due to her no longer being vegan.
Ellen DeGeneres

Ellen has won more People’s Choice Awards than any other person (20), which go nicely along with her 30 Emmys and the Presidential Medal of Freedom. The popular daytime talk show host has also hosted the Academy Awards, Primetime Emmys and Grammy Awards ceremonies, authored four books and starred in two different television series. While she has mostly avoided politics on her show, the forays she has made have left no question about her liberal ideas. She was a vocal advocate for same-sex marriage (which makes sense, given her own marriage to Portia de Rossi) and has said that she will not invite President Trump on her show: “He’s against everything that I stand for.”
Eminem

Marshall Mathers III, who goes by Eminem, was the best-selling artist of the 2000s and has had ten No. 1 albums on the Billboard 200 over the course of his career. The 45-year-old rapper has also sold over 100 million singles in the U.S. alone. He’s long had a political bent to his lyrics, which included a music video in which he ripped up the Constitution in 2002 and an unreleased song in 2003 that was investigated by the Secret Service as a possible threat against President George W. Bush. More recently, he released a music video mocking President Trump and saying that he didn’t want any Trump supporters among his fans.