cupure logo
trumpelectionpopetrumpsaustralianalbanesewinsanthonylaborwarren

Trump's White House is the hottest right-wing media outlet

Trump's White House is the hottest right-wing media outlet
The White House is deploying its platforms and personnel in ways that often feel more like how a modern media company would operate than a national government.Why it matters: Through flashy stunts, meme-heavy social media postings and camera-friendly Cabinet secretaries, Trump 2.0 has been built to win attention and fire up the MAGA base.The big picture: The strategy reflects a sophisticated understanding of the current media environment — and takes the jolting step of incorporating it into the official communications of the United States.Driving the news: The White House this week launched a website styled like the Drudge Report to share Trump-friendly news.A few days earlier, it decorated its lawn with posters of arrested unauthorized immigrants. The purpose: Position the posters so they'd be visible in TV news crews' live shots.On social media, Trump administration accounts have employed provocative tactics — often on immigration — to tap into the zeitgeist of those platforms and get reach and reaction. It's a striking contrast to the benign and restrained approach that previous administrations and other countries take with their online presence.The official White House X account posted an ASMR-style video of migrants being deported and a cartoon rendering of a crying woman being arrested by ICE. This week it tapped into the viral 100 men vs. one gorilla meme to tout deportations.White House TikTok and Instagram accounts have posted videos of arrests and ICE patrols, accompanied with lyrics "You don't have to go home but you can't stay here," and "I will be kickin' you out."Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem posted a video from El Salvador's notorious CECOT prison with dozens of bare-chested inmates as the backdrop.Trump drew criticism this week for posting an AI-generated image of himself dressed as the pope on Truth Social days ahead of the papal conclave and as the mourning of Pope Francis continues. Zoom out: Critical staffing decisions appeared to be influenced as much by on-camera abilities as government experience.Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and Attorney General Pam Bondi were both battle-tested in the art of verbal combat and pithy one-liners as Fox News regulars.Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy was a Fox Business host.Zoom in: The White House is even making money through events in the mold of a D.C. media company: It sold corporate sponsorships for its annual Easter Egg Roll.Social media users may have been surprised to see the White House X account thanking Amazon, YouTube and Meta in posts about the event.The bottom line: Trump's climb to the pinnacle of power was fueled by a new media environment that breathed life into his movement in novel ways. The lessons learned are being applied as official messages from the U.S. government.

Comments

Similar News

World news