Infinite Scroll
Kyle Chayka on the people and platforms that are shaping digital culture. https://www.newyorker.com/culture/infinite-scroll
For this week’s Infinite Scroll column, Brady Brickner-Wood is filling in for Kyle Chayka.
Late last year, the White House’s social-media team lauded ICE’s
torrential deportation efforts with a string of memes seemingly
engineered to go viral. In one video posted to Instagram, the song
“all-american bitch,” by Olivia Rodrigo, provides a soundtrack to a
montage of deportees being forced onto buses and planes; in another,
Sabrina Carpenter’s “Juno” plays as ICE agents
accost people in the streets, the lyric “Have you ever tried this one?”
repeating each time a new person is detained. Another video uses the
satirical song “Big Boys,” from a “Saturday Night Live” skit featuring
SZA, as agents handcuff people in parking lots. A line from the
song—“It’s cuffing season”—flashes in all caps across the screen.
Rodrigo, Carpenter, and SZA have denounced the videos as “hateful,”
“evil,” and “peak dark,” respectively. (In response to Carpenter, the
White House doctored a video promoting her own “S.N.L.” appearance to
make it seem as if she said she would “arrest” the cast member Marcello
Hernández for being “too illegal.”) Unlike other cases of Trump using
musicians’ songs, against their will, at rallies or in campaign
materials—Beyoncé, Adele, and Jack White, among them—these videos are
not one-off inanities or easily ignorable promotional assets. Instead,
they are part of a hundred-million-dollar “wartime recruitment” effort,
according to an internal document obtained by the Washington Post, aimed at hiring thousands more deportation officers in the new year, a propaganda crusade intended to portray ICE
as a team of Avengers valiantly defending American soil from a
malevolent foreign terror. By splicing pop songs and familiar meme
formats into cruel detainment footage, ICE
strains to attract a younger demographic, hoping to convince people that
the agency is a vibrant—and trollishly funny—organization engaged in
the noble work of putting away bad guys. Oh, the pop stars got mad?
Joke’s on them. Now even more people know ICE is hiring.
Illustration by Ariel Davis
The Trump Administration has pledged to deport a million immigrants each year during the President’s second term—even, it appears, if the immigrants have not committed crimes or are lawfully residing in the U.S. This past summer, as part of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, Congress increased ICE’s budget to more than a hundred and seventy billion dollars across the next four years, netting out to an annual allocation that is more than the combined yearly budgets of all local and state law-enforcement agencies in the country. ICE has used some of this money to go on a hiring spree; the agency recently announced that it had signed up twelve thousand new officers and agents—a hundred-and-twenty-per-cent increase to its workforce... READ MORE https://www.newyorker.com/culture/infinite-scroll/ices-new-age-propaganda