f.”BOYCOTT THIS FAKE JOKER!”: Jared Leto DECLARES WAR on Barry Keoghan, calling his Joker “FAKE” and “INSULTING”.f

HOLLYWOOD, Oct. 16, 2025 — In a bombshell interview that’s got the entire DC Universe spiraling into absolute pandemonium, Jared Leto just lit the fuse on what might be the most unhinged actor beef since Marlon Brando faxed his lines to a producer. The Oscar winner, infamous for his tattooed, grill-flashing take on the Clown Prince of Crime in 2016’s Suicide Squad, unleashed a torrent of venom on Barry Keoghan’s brooding, deleted-scene tease of the Joker from Matt Reeves’ The Batman. “I’m the only real Joker,” Leto snarled in a late-night podcast drop that racked up 2 million views before the sun even cracked over the Hollywood Hills. “That kid’s version? Fake as a three-dollar bill. Insulting. Like some knockoff Halloween costume you buy at a gas station. He doesn’t get it—the chaos, the edge. He’s playing dress-up in my shadow.”

The words hit like a Batarang to the gut, especially coming from Leto, whose own Joker was eviscerated by critics back in the day. Remember the headlines? “Jared Leto’s Joker: A Hot Mess of Grills and Gangster Vibes That Missed the Mark.” Rotten Tomatoes slapped it with a measly 26% for the film, and fans still roast his method-acting antics—dead rats mailed to co-stars, anyone?—as the pinnacle of try-hard excess. But Leto? He’s not backing down. In the interview, he doubled down, eyes blazing like he’d just mainlined Red Bull and spite. “I lived it. I breathed the anarchy. Barry? He’s got that creepy-crawly thing going, sure, but it’s surface-level. No soul. No punch. DC’s diluting the icon, and it pisses me off.” Sources close to the Morbius star (yes, that flop) whisper he’s been stewing since Keoghan’s uncredited cameo in The Batman went viral in 2022, with millions dubbing the Irish actor’s disheveled, scar-faced psycho “the breath of fresh chaos Gotham needed.” Leto’s response? A full-throated war cry that’s turned Tinseltown into a clown car careening off a cliff.

And oh boy, did the fans explode. X—formerly Twitter, for you normies—lit up faster than the Joker’s warehouse full of goons. Hashtags like #LetoVsKeoghan and #RealJokerRumble trended worldwide within hours, amassing over 500,000 posts by midday. One viral thread from comic die-hard @BatFanatic87 racked up 150K likes: “Leto calling Keoghan fake? Pot, meet kettle. Your Joker’s the reason we all needed therapy after Suicide Squad. Barry’s got that unhinged vibe in TWO MINUTES. Step off, Jared!” Not everyone’s Team Keoghan, though. SnyderVerse loyalists—those die-hards still petitioning for Zack Snyder’s uncut epics—rallied behind Leto like it was 2017 all over again. “Leto’s Joker was raw, modern menace,” tweeted @ZackCutKing, whose post got 80K retweets. “Keoghan’s just another pale imitation. Bring back the tattoos and the edge!” The divide’s brutal: Reddit’s r/DC_Cinematic exploded with polls showing a razor-thin 52-48 split, fistfights nearly breaking out in comment sections over whether Leto’s gangster schtick or Keoghan’s eerie, Lecter-lite leer captures the Bat-villain’s essence better. Memes flooded in—photoshops of Leto and Keoghan in a literal boxing ring, Leto wielding a grill as a weapon, Keoghan lurking in shadows with a straightjacket. One gem, shared 20K times, captioned: “DC’s new multiverse: Leto vs. Keoghan, winner gets eviscerated by fans anyway.”

This isn’t just petty actor shade; it’s a symptom of DC’s deeper rot, a franchise that’s been rebooting harder than a Windows machine on a caffeine crash. James Gunn, the Guardians of the Galaxy maestro now helming the DCU like a ringmaster on a tightrope, was dragged into the fray faster than you can say “Chapter One: Gods and Monsters.” Hours after Leto’s rant dropped, Gunn fired off a frantic X post from his verified account: “Whoa, slow your rolls, clown fam. Every Joker’s a fresh nightmare—Leto’s fire, Barry’s chills, all valid chaos. DC’s big tent, no gatekeeping. Let’s focus on the laughs, not the beef. More Batman bangers incoming. #DCUnity.” It was meant to douse the flames, but it only poured gasoline. Fans pounced: “Gunn dodging the real question—who’s YOUR Joker?” one user jabbed, netting 12K likes. Gunn’s been walking this wire since taking the reins in 2022, axing Leto’s Joker from future plans while greenlighting Reeves’ standalone Batman saga with Keoghan lurking as the next big bad. Whispers from Warner Bros. insiders paint a picture of boardroom panic: “Gunn’s sweating bullets. This feud’s spotlighting how fractured DC still is post-Snyder, post-Flash flop. They need unity, not this circus.”

Leto’s not stopping at trash-talk. Insiders spill he’s plotting a comeback vehicle—a gritty, R-rated Joker origin flick outside the DCU, “to remind everyone what real anarchy looks like.” Keoghan, ever the cool cucumber, hasn’t bitten back publicly, but his camp leaked a sly response: “Jared’s passion is noted. Barry’s just getting started—watch this space.” With The Batman Part II filming wrap imminent and Gunn’s Superman dropping next summer, the timing couldn’t be worse. DC’s supposed to be rising from the ashes of Justice League debacles and Joker: Folie à Deux‘s box-office bellyflop (Phoenix’s arthouse take grossed a measly $200M worldwide, fans griping it strayed too far from the comics). Instead, it’s devolving into a clown college throwdown, with Leto’s ego clashing against Keoghan’s quiet menace like oil and water in a Gotham gutter.

The fallout’s already rippling. Merch sales for Leto’s Joker—those gaudy purple suits and “Damaged” tees—spiked 30% overnight on Etsy, while Keoghan’s eerie deleted-scene clips are recirculating like wildfire, racking up 50 million YouTube views anew. Podcasters are booking slots faster than scalpers at a Taylor Swift drop, dissecting every syllable of Leto’s tirade. “This is gold for DC,” one Variety exec chuckled anonymously. “Hate-watching sells tickets.” But beneath the spectacle, there’s a raw nerve: the Joker’s the ultimate mirror to Batman’s soul, and when actors start swinging at each other’s legacies, it exposes how desperately DC craves a cohesive mythos. Heath Ledger’s ghost looms large—his anarchic masterpiece from The Dark Knight still the gold standard, untouchable and Oscar-crowned. Nicholson’s campy flair? Iconic. Phoenix’s tragic spiral? Polarizing genius. But Leto and Keoghan? They’re the multiverse’s messy stepkids, fighting for scraps in a sandbox of slashed scripts and studio meddling.

As the sun sets on this latest DC dumpster fire, one thing’s crystal: the Joker’s laugh is echoing louder than ever, but it’s coming from us fans, cackling at the absurdity. Leto might claim the crown, but in this war of painted smiles, everyone’s losing their minds—and loving every twisted second. Will Gunn broker peace, or will this escalate to cameos clashing on screen? Stay tuned, Gotham. The punchline’s just getting started.