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Why celebs at the Golden Globes we wearing ‘Be Good’ pins on the red carpet

Guests honoured Renee Macklin Good and Keith Porter at the event.

by · Glamour UK

The red carpet at the Golden Globes 2026 featured a couple new accessories this year – “BE GOOD” pins.

Mark Ruffalo, for example, wore the “BE GOOD” pin when he arrived on the Golden Globes red carpet with his wife, Sunrise Coigney, while Jean Smart sported her pin when she accepted her award for Best Actress in a Television Series – Comedy.

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On January 11, the biggest names in television and film came together to celebrate another year of artistic achievements, but others, like Ruffalo, Smart, Natasha Lyonne, and Wanda Sykes also used the awards ceremony's red carpet as a platform to speak out against the Trump administration and the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency, following the recent deaths of Renee Macklin Good and Keith Porter, two US citizens who were killed by ICE officers.

Porter, a 43-year-old father of two, was shot by an off-duty ICE agent at a New Year's Eve celebration in California, while Good, a poet and 37-year-old mother of three, was shot three times by ICE agent Jonathan Ross in Minneapolis on 7 January.

Mark Ruffalo wears a “Be Good” pin at the Golden Globes 2026.John Shearer

Golden Globes nominees, presenters, and attendees were given the option to wear these pins as part of the #BeGood campaign, backed by the ACLU.

“The #BeGood campaign aims to honour Renee Macklin Good and Keith Porter while also reminding us what it means to be good to one another in the face of such horror—to be a good citizen, neighbour, friend, ally and human," a rep for the campaign wrote in a press statement.

"Everyday, everywhere, regular people are being good: keeping kids safe when they walk to school, filming fathers who are being disappeared from their workplaces, donating to fundraisers to support organisations who are keeping us safe.”

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You can read the full #BeGood campaign press statement here:

The #BeGood campaign aims to honour Renee Macklin Good and Keith Porter while also reminding us what it means to be good to one another in the face of such horror—to be a good citizen, neighbor, friend, ally and human. Everyday, everywhere, regular people are being good: keeping kids safe when they walk to school, filming fathers who are being disappeared from their workplaces, donating to fundraisers to support organisations who are keeping us safe.

The #BeGood campaign is launching following reports that 2025 was one of ICE’s deadliest year in two decades, and in response to the current administration's $100 million wartime recruitment campaign aimed at expanding enforcement capacity.

For the past year, the Trump administration has been stretching federal power to punish and intimidate communities, often by turning immigrants into scapegoats and using the Department of Homeland Security as the tip of the spear. ICE is not making our communities safer. They are bringing chaos into our streets, and families, immigrants and U.S. citizens alike, pay the price.

The coalition behind #BeGood includes Maremoto, Move On, National Domestic Workers Alliance, Working Families Power and leaders from every sector of the entertainment industry are showing support.

This article was first published on Glamour US.