While some of the elite Hollywood types complain about President Donald Trump’s victory, others have come to embrace it and let it humble them a little. I reported about how it opened actress Jennifer Garner’s eyes, but it also opened designer Tom Ford’s eyes:

“Oddly, it made me want to come back even more,” Ford told Women’s Wear Daily, which reported that the designer recently bought a house in Los Angeles. “We have a tremendous number of people in this country who feel disenfranchised and clearly we are not relating to or speaking to them. I am at my core American, and it made me want to come back. It didn’t make me want to run away.”

Instead of lashing out at Trump supporters, Ford realized that the president spoke to those who have felt ignored and also needed to be taken seriously:

“I think when you sense that there is a divide in your country and that there are people who perhaps you’re not relating to, and that those of us who are fortunate enough to live in a world of very liberal human rights and privilege, it’s a wake-up call that we’re not addressing a big part of the country that does feel disenfranchised,” he explained. “It made me feel more nationalistic, if anything. The whole country is not like New York and L.A. and the world that I am used to living in.”

BOOM. When will the other elite realize this?

Last month, Garner made similar remarks to The Washington Post when she claimed she would help Trump uphold a few of his campaign promises even though many of her friends “want to turn their back to this administration.” Garner refuses to do that since many of the poor communities she has helped “went big for Trump” in November:

“People felt like Trump really understood them, that he was going to come in and create jobs for them,” she said. “They felt like they needed something to just turn everything upside down.”

Ford made news when he said he would not dress First Lady Melania Trump, joining a long list of designers, but he later clarified these comments:

“I think that whoever is the President, or the First Lady, should be wearing clothes at a price point that are accessible to most Americans, and wearing clothes made in America,” he told he magazine. “My clothes are made in Italy, they’re very, very expensive. I don’t think most women or men in our country can relate to that, and I think the First Lady or the President should represent all people.”



