Beyoncé received several praises from various personalities for her new album "Cowboy Carter," but one commentator wasn't into the hype.

Megyn Kelly, journalist and media personality, weighed in on the "Lemonade" singer's new album. She wasn't so much into the record and even felt that the people were overreacting, including Michelle Obama and Kamala Harris, who both expressed their approval of the record.

"So, she's come out now with a country album, and of course, these leftist and media whores pretend that no one's ever done country before Beyoncé has done it. It's all, 'Country is this wonderful new genre that Queen Bey has discovered.' 'Oh my god, this is wonderful.' And the reactions to her album called 'Cowboy Carter' are typically over the top," Kelly wrote on her website.

She quoted Obama's and Harris' responses to the album on X, formerly Twitter, and said the two ladies shared "the same message," with the former first lady always finding a way to "work how downtrodden she's been into her tweets and posts."

"I'm sure it's very hard for Beyoncé to be who she is unapologetically with her billions of dollars that she and her husband have earned despite how crappy this nation has treated her," she continued.

"What is this? Is this feminism? Is this aggrievement? And why is it that Queen Bey is being treated like she's the first person to take a little dalliance over into this weird, foreign, unknown world of country music? We have this need to always make it into something so much bigger."

Kelly also seemingly criticized Beyoncé's rendition of Dolly Parton's "Jolene." The original version tells the story of a woman begging another woman named "Jolene" not to steal her man because she believes that Jolene can.

However, Beyoncé's version is different, as she warns Jolene never to take her man.

"Don't take the chance because you think you can," Beyoncé sings in one line.

In another part of the song, the singer continues, "To come between a family and a happy man Jolene / I'm a woman too / The game you play are nothing new / So you don't want to heat with me, Jolene."

"Because it's Queen Bey, we have to change the message of the song to 'if you f*****g take my man, I will hurt you b***h.' She actually uses the word 'b***h' in the new version," Kelly added.

"It is much more threatening, which I guess Beyoncé and Team Bey think is what empowerment looks like. For now, the threatened woman is just threatening to another woman who she thinks might have designs on her life partner."

Despite the different praises the Grammy winner received from her fans and supporters, including Obama and Harris, Kelly expressed her disapproval of the song.

"I have to say, I don't find this empowering at all," she said. "There's something strange about what is happening with the modern-day definition of what a strong woman is. You can't have any vulnerabilities or insecurities. You have to be this badass b***h who is threatening. To me, it's a turnoff."

Kelly's statements came after the ex-FLOTUS shared the cover art for Beyoncé's album and called the singer a "record-breaker and history-maker." Obama also said the musician redefined a "music genre and transform[ed] our culture."

Meanwhile, the vice president thanked Beyoncé for the inspiration and reminding the public to "never feel confined to other people's perspective of what our lane is."

"You have redefined a genre and reclaimed country music's Black roots. Your music continues to inspire us all," Harris added in her tweet.

Kelly wasn't alone in her opinion about Beyoncé's new album. Some netizens disagreed that Beyoncé's latest album made the Black community proud, considering her appearance on the cover.

"Is she? Is she really???? Blonde straight hair, and her skin is bleached so it is whiter than most white people. Clearly, she doesn't like being part of that community," one commented.

Another added, "This album is bad, actually."

Beyoncé dropped her newest album, "Cowboy Carter," on March 29.

Tags
Michelle Obama, Kamala Harris, Beyonce, Megyn Kelly