Dean Cain Bonds with Co-Star Over Pro-America Beliefs
By Movieguide® Contributor
Actress AnnaLynne McCord recently shared that she and co-star Dean Cain bonded over conversations about the Constitution while on set.
The duo appeared in the newly released movie CONDITION OF RETURN and in the TV show 90210. Both stars are very vocal about their pro-America beliefs.
“Working with him was inspiring conversations,” McCord told Fox News Digital. “Off-set, we were talking about his work as a part-time law enforcement officer, his role as an NRA board director and…why our U.S. Constitution is what it is.”
“I’m a staunch supporter of our Second Amendment and our First Amendment, which is another thing that I feel is encroached upon recently,” she added.
Cain told America’s 1st Freedom, “The right of citizens to keep and bear arms is as much of a civil right as freedom of speech, religion and freedom of the press, and should be protected as such.”
A gun owner herself, McCord told The Messenger that she and Cain could talk to each other about gun control without too much emotion. She wishes that the same thing would happen in political environments.
“We sat there across from each other, we agreed on some things, we disagreed on other things, and then we got up and did our scenes together, had lunch together,” she said.
“I wish that we could have conversations like Dean and I were having off-set in a town hall in our country because real human beings, real American citizens actually can think logically and have critical thinking skills and can talk about this in a way that our politicians cannot,” McCord said.
Movieguide® previously reported on actor Kevin Sorbo’s perspective on the Second Amendment:
‘Growing up in Minnesota, I had many friends who were hunters, so I was aware of guns from a very young age in terms of hunting and target shooting,” Sorbo said. ‘For me, the Second Amendment had a much more simple meaning. It wasn’t until I got older and more political that I saw how brilliant our Founders were and the reason the Second Amendment was so important then and is, perhaps, even more important today. The Founders wanted to protect the American citizens from the likes of government control we see growing today.’