Tools
Change country:

Pop culture went MAGA before the election did

Two men singing onstage with two guitarists and a pedal steel player.
Singers Post Malone and Morgan Wallen performing at the 57th Annual CMA Music Awards on November 8, 2023 | Frank Micelotta/Disney via Getty Images

Earlier this year, conservatives on social media claimed an unlikely new icon. It wasn’t a podcaster with questionable views or a libertarian businessman selling a course or any particular ideology. It was actress Sydney Sweeney, Euphoria star and the recent lead of the rom-com Anyone But You. 

Following her hosting gig on Saturday Night Live in March, two conservative outlets published columns heralding Sweeney as a return to conventional beauty standards of the ’90s and early 2000s — or as, Bridget Phetasy for the Spectator put it, “the giggling blonde with an amazing rack.” Both pieces postulate that, by wearing low-cut dresses and playing up her sexuality, Sweeney was inviting men to gawk at her, therefore raising a middle finger to “woke culture” and the Me Too movement. 

Sweeney hasn’t publicly aligned herself with the right in any way. (Her family’s politics, though, were the subject of controversy in 2022, which may have something to do with the right’s eager embrace of her.) Rather, her ascension as a throwback-y, hyper-feminine sex symbol has given conservatives the rare mainstream Gen Z figure on whom to project their values. For those paying close attention, the past year was rife with springboards for the conservative message.

In the hindsight following Trump’s reelection, it seems the zeitgeist of 2024 was a foreshadowing of his return to office and something forecasters might have considered a little more seriously. “Bro country” singers became the artists de jour, going head-to-head with female pop singers on the charts and, in many cases, outperforming them. The buzziest new reality shows were about Dallas Cowboys cheerleaders and Mormon TikTokers. Conservative films from smaller distributors, like the biopic Reagan and Daily Wire documentary Am I Racist?, made millions at the box office. Nominally apolitical podcasters and streamers, from Joe Rogan to the Nelk Boys, hosted presidential candidates and took on an increasingly political valence. 

It’s a sharp turn from the liberal-coded pop culture of the Obama years and the sort of trends that took off in response to Trump’s first presidency — comic-book movies with a progressive edge like Wonder Woman and Black Panther, social commentary films like Get Out and Promising Young Woman, not to mention the explosion of drag culture

Joel Penney, an associate professor at Montclair State University, says the overall conservative feel of pop culture at the moment is, in many ways, a response to the Me Too movement and the notion by its detractors that “masculinity is in crisis.” At the same time that we’re seeing Sweeney receive praise for representing “traditional” femininity, the All-American straight white “bro” is getting renewed cultural attention. 

“There’s been a lot of this trying to restore these strong male role models in pop culture, whether it’s Tom Cruise in the Top Gun remake or these ‘bro’ podcasters and country singers,” Penney says. 

2024 was all about the straight white bro 

We can see this happening most visibly in mainstream music. It’s not just that country music — a Southern genre with a past and present of conservative politics — has emerged in the mainstream over the past two years — with much controversy. It’s that this class of musicians — Morgan Wallen, Zach Bryan, Jelly Roll, Luke Combs, Shaboozey, and the newly rustic Post Malone — are glaringly male. Shaboozey’s unprecedented achievements in an overwhelmingly white genre add a refreshing element to this conversation. Beyoncé also released a successful country album this year that features Shaboozey and an array of Black female country artists. Cowboy Carter’s lead single, “Texas Hold ’Em,” topped the Billboard Hot 100 for two weeks, a shorter amount of time than Morgan Wallen, Post Malone, and Shaboozey’s No.1 songs this year. Nor was she recognized by the country establishment, getting completely shut out of the CMAs. Overall, it seems like country fans and the average young person, who’s listening to more country music these days, are still more eager to hear dudes croon about beer.

Outside of the charts, these country singers have also become mainstream personalities and subjects of celebrity gossip. In the span of roughly a year, Bryan went from a little-known alternative country crooner posting videos on YouTube to a celebrity whose personal relationships are being analyzed by TikTok users and explained in the pages of People. Jelly Roll and his wife, influencer and popular podcast host Bunnie XO, have also become a recognizable celebrity couple, while Morgan Wallen’s dating life and public antics have become Page Six fodder. 

Zach Bryan in an all-black tuxedo posing beside a brunette in a lace corset dress.

Elsewhere in pop culture, figures seemingly designated for a more male, conservative audience have gone mainstream. First, there was the viral video of a woman from Tennessee being asked about oral sex outside of a bar — a very bro-y Girls Gone Wild-inspired genre that’s emerged on TikTok — and offering a memorable onomatopoeia. There’s also the viral Florida-based father-and-son duo A.J. and Big Justice, who do food reviews at Costco. With the exception of Big Justice’s sister and mother — who’s literally referred to as the “Mother of Big Justice” in videos — this expanded universe of “Costco Guys” is made of white men and boys from Florida and New Jersey rating foods in a cartoonishly macho manner.  

@a.j.befumo

We Bring The BOOM! ? Part 2‼️ #song #father #son #family #fun #bigjustice #boom ? @Rj Pasin ? @CameraManKyle

♬ original sound – A.J. & Big Justice

They’re not explicitly expressing MAGA as a value, but they’re trafficking in spaces that have been less visible in recent years: rural and suburban enclaves, featuring white, heterosexual, male, and even “bro-y” talent that was out of vogue in recent history. 

One can assume that the current MAGA-coded fabric of mainstream culture correlates with a generation of young people who identify as more conservative than their parents, although Penney says the relationship between pop culture and politics is a two-way street. While the media can reflect growing opinions and interests of the moment, it can also be used to shape it. 

“Pop culture doesn’t just emerge out of nowhere,” says Penney, who wrote the book Pop Culture, Politics, and the News. “We’re seeing attempts to shape the culture that are increasingly coming from the conservative media ecosystem.”

Conservatives carved out a space for themselves at the movies 

In March, Ben Shapiro’s media company The Daily Wire released its first theatrical movie, the “satirical” documentary Am I Racist?, which earned $4.5 million its opening weekend. Currently, it’s the highest-grossing documentary of the year along with a handful of other conservative nonfiction films including the Catholic documentary Jesus Thirsts: The Story of the Eucharist, the Dinesh D’Souza-directed Vindicating Trump, and the creationist movie The Ark and The Darkness all making the top 10 list.

2024 saw other movies from conservative studios and right-wing producers make notable financial gains. Despite overwhelmingly negative reviews, the Ronald Reagan biopic, Reagan, starring Dennis Quaid, broke into the Top 5 at the box office when it premiered in August, doing particularly well with older, white, and Southern audiences. This summer, the Christian media company Angel Studios also released the pro-adoption movie Sound of Hope: The Story of Possum Trout, marketed by Daily Wire+. While it made significantly less money than its 2023 predecessor Sound of Freedom, which had a vocal fanbase of QAnon supporters, its nearly $12 million worldwide earnings are still a massive accomplishment for a small Christian film with no movie stars attached. 

While the performance of these movies has not bred the same immediate concern of something like Sound of Freedom, it does provide a potential incentive for major studios to start courting a movie-going crowd that’s felt alienated by mainstream Hollywood.

Actors Glen Powell and Daisy Edgar-Jones looking at a tornado in the 2024 film Twisters.

Warner Bros has yet to produce its own Sound of Freedom, but we’ve seen hints that Hollywood is interested in movies that at least appeal to white, Southern, and conservative audiences. American nostalgia bait came to the fore in the summer blockbuster Twisters. The Oklahoma-set film with a star-studded, country-infused soundtrack did particularly well in Southern cities and theater chains in middle America, outperforming initial estimations. While it’s probably most accurate to describe the film as decidedly apolitical with some patriotic markers, it does see the white, blond savior (played by Glen Powell) emasculate the movie’s other male main character, Latino storm chaser Javi (Anthony Ramos). Powell happened to produce another piece of Americana, Blue Angels, a look at the US Navy’s flight demo squadron, and the fourth highest-grossing documentary of 2024. He also co-starred in Anyone But You with Sweeney, a film released at the end of 2023 that crossed the $200 million mark in early 2024.

Penney says that corporations will try new strategies and pander to different audiences, as they’ve done with Marvel and Disney’s diversity pushes in recent years, based on what they think will benefit them financially. They’re not really thinking about political impact. 

“That was very much the reality of capitalism at work,” says Penney. “[Disney] was trying new strategies, not because they were really, truly convinced that they were going to save the world through expanding diversity, but they were getting a sense that that’s what the audience wanted. It was a response to Me Too and Black Lives Matter and things that actually resonated with our culture to a degree.” 

This pendulum swing from the sort of diversity-focused art that dominated pop culture during the Obama years to what we’re seeing now is hardly unprecedented. Specifically in music, country’s popularity as a genre has historically corresponded with a push in right-wing politics, from the jingoist anthems following 9/11 to “Okie from Muskogee” during the Nixon years. Pop culture has also seen movies with conservative and/or religious themes, from American Sniper and The Passion of the Christ, break the box office. If this current moment tells us anything, it’s that we’re stuck in an ouroboros of shifting political values and corporate interests. 

Suffice to say, it’s not a question of whether we’ve been here before but whether we’re paying attention to what these signals all mean. With an honest look at our media landscape, were the results of the election truly that surprising? 


Read full article on: vox.com
Cheaters are using this sneaky iPhone app to send secret sexts: ‘I’ve done it’
It's the forbidden Apple (app).
nypost.com
‘Interesting theory’ about Tom Brady’s broadcasting future floating around NFL
NBC NFL analyst Mike Florio floated a theory among NFL circles that Tom Brady isn't all in as FOX Sports’ top NFL broadcaster.
nypost.com
Want the viral Anthropologie mirror? Get the Wayfair dupe for under $200 before Black Friday
You're looking at the best early Black Friday decor deal yet.
nypost.com
Prince William tries out past hobby that filled Kate Middleton with 'horror’
Prince William visited the Virtual Production Studio in Northern Ireland and tested out a stationary motorcycle that took him for a ride through a virtual desert landscape.
foxnews.com
‘RHOSLC’ star Bronwyn Newport and Coach clap back after Lisa Barlow’s dig at the fashion brand
After the Vida Tequila owner said she doesn't "carry Coach" and doesn't "fly coach" in the latest episode of the Bravo show.
nypost.com
Trump claims he can bring peace to the world. In India, many believe him
The world's most populous country has consistently favorable views of U.S. President-elect Trump. In a Pew Research Center poll, 42% of Indians, including 51% of men, said they had confidence in him.
npr.org
Andy Cohen, Anderson Cooper take subway selfie and more star snaps
Andy Cohen and Anderson Cooper snap a selfie, Brittany Cartwright sizzles in the pool and more snaps...
nypost.com
The reason behind Chris Wallace’s CNN exit revealed: report
CNN anchor Chris Wallace was reportedly told his two poorly-rated shows would be canceled and his massive salary slashed before the veteran journalist announced he would leave the network. Wallace, who was being paid a reported $7 million a year, was informed that he was welcome to stay on as an analyst but at a...
nypost.com
Dozens of new emojis are coming to your phone in 2025 — with some head-scratchers on the shortlist
There will reportedly be a total of 164 new digital hieroglyphics, released as part of the Emoji 17.0 and Unicode 17.0 beta.
nypost.com
A new context for 'There Will Be Blood,' plus the week's best movies in L.A.
Also this week: Pamela Anderson presents 'The Misfits,' 10 years of David Wain's 'They Came Together' and a Kris Kristofferson tribute double-bill.
latimes.com
Here's why LA28 officials are not worried about Trump's support for the Olympics
Local Olympic organizers said they have detected no signs of resistance in conversations with President-elect Trump’s transition team or other Washington D.C. officials.
latimes.com
Jake Paul’s mom threatens to ‘kill’ Mike Tyson after weigh-in slap: ‘F---ing little b----’
Jake Paul's mom made a vicious threat towards Mike Tyson on Thursday night after the former heavyweight champion slapped the YouTuber-turned-boxer during their final weigh-in.
foxnews.com
Jim Carrey’s older sister Rita dead: ‘She filled everyone’s heart with joy’
"It’s been a wonderful and crazy journey with Rita," her husband shared.
nypost.com
5 signs that your weight problems are caused by hormones — check your butt and stomach ‘pouch’
Spare tire got you feeling deflated?
nypost.com
Thousands of gun sales on hold in Washington State amid weeks-long court system outage
Thousands of gun sales are on hold across Washington State due to a network outage that began two weeks ago. Now Second Amendment advocates are threatening legal action.
foxnews.com
NJ face transplant recipient, fiancee post engagement photos: ‘So inspiring’
Joe DiMeo, 26, and his fiancée Jessica Perez, 32, shared a preview of their engagement photos on their joint Facebook account.
nypost.com
Hochman plans to clean house in LA after routing Gascón in landslide: ‘Untie the law-enforcement officer’s hands’
It’s morning again in the City of Angels. Nathan Hochman, an assistant attorney general under President George W. Bush, dethroned Los Angeles County District Attorney George Gascón in a landslide victory last week. Hochman, a registered independent, took 61% of the vote versus a tepid 39% for the far-left prosecutor elected in 2020. He’ll assume...
nypost.com
Oklahoma school district cited for indifference to students’ civil rights
In an agreement with federal investigators, Owasso school officials promise to address instances of discrimination and sex-based harassment of students.
washingtonpost.com
Trump picks Steven Cheung for communications director, Sergio Gor for personnel office director
President-elect Donald Trump has made two more additions to his White House staff, promoting campaign spokesman Steven Cheung to White House communications director and Sergio Gor to the personnel office.
foxnews.com
Bhutan | Sunday on 60 Minutes
The Buddhist kingdom of Bhutan, where Gross National Happiness is more important than Gross National Product, is facing a crisis — 9% of its population has left. This Sunday, Lesley Stahl travels to Bhutan to learn how they’re trying to lure people back.
cbsnews.com
Americans dream about being somewhere else everyday — especially during these months
From researching destinations to going down travel-related rabbit holes, results showed people accumulate 4.7 hours a week on average dreaming of far-flung places.
nypost.com
Stream It Or Skip It: ‘Silo’ Season 2 On Apple TV+, Where Juliette Finds A New Silo While The People She Left Behind Continue To Get Gaslit
Creator Graham Yost follows Juliette to a new silo in the Season 2 premiere.
nypost.com
Editor-in-chief of Scientific American quits after calling Trump voters ‘fascists’ | Reporter Replay
Laura Helmuth, the editor-in-chief of Scientific American, has resigned after receiving fierce backlash for her expletive-filled online tirade in which she called Donald Trump voters “f–king fascists” on election night. “I’ve decided to leave Scientific American after an exciting 4.5 years as editor in chief,” Helmuth announced on her Bluesky account.
nypost.com
Elon Musk makes bold prediction about new government position: ‘This is going to be a revolution’
The billionaire said it 'won’t be business as usual,' but rather a 'revolution'
nypost.com
Parents tried to choke 17-year-old daughter in attempted ‘honor killing’ for refusing arranged marriage: cops
“It’s not right … you are not supposed to do this,” her father told her with his hands around her throat before she blacked out.
nypost.com
House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries addresses Trump Cabinet picks
Rep. Hakeem Jeffries, leader of the House Democratic Caucus, shared his thoughts on the controversy surrounding President-elect Donald Trump's recent personnel choices for his incoming administration. "Are these the best individuals available," Jeffries asked. Associated Press chief White House correspondent Zeke Miller joined CBS News to discuss how Trump's Cabinet is shaping up.
cbsnews.com
What gold assets should you invest in now that the price has dropped?
The price of gold is dropping, but savvy investors could capitalize on that trend by pursuing these specific assets.
cbsnews.com
O Christmas tree! Firs are dying from severe drought in Northeast
Yuletide firs are dying from a severe drought that’s plagued parts of the Northeast for weeks — with some farmers losing 25% of this year’s crop and predicting a future shortage.
nypost.com
I convinced my husband to live on a luxury cruise ship — here’s why I think we made a great investment
Travel adviser Estee Gubbay had been dreaming of living on a luxury cruise ship for years, but there was only one problem: Her husband, Paul, a C-level tech executive, was very much not on board.
nypost.com
One worker killed, another injured in construction accident at Orange County high school
One worker was killed and another was injured in an accident in a construction zone at an Orange County high school, according to authorities.
latimes.com
How an NCAA infraction could complicate Lincoln Riley’s USC future
Minor NCAA infractions could wind up being a major issue for USC football coach Lincoln Riley.
nypost.com
'Political prosecutions': Republican AGs demand end to 'lawfare' prosecutions of President-elect Trump
GOP Attorneys General urge an end to "political prosecutions" against Trump, calling cases unjust and aimed at derailing his presidency.
foxnews.com
Mike Johnson wants Ethics panel to keep Matt Gaetz report secret
The Republican leader argued releasing the report about Trump's attorney general pick would set a "terrible precedent."
cbsnews.com
Return of the ‘90s divas: Why Mary J. Blige and Gwen Stefani, back with new albums, still deserve ‘Real Love’ — no doubt!
Mary J. Blige's "Gratitude" and Gwen Stefani's "Bouquet" show that these divas are not ready to rest on their legendary laurels just yet.
nypost.com
The Hitchhiker's Guide to potentially releasing the Ethics Committee report on Gaetz
The House Ethics Committee was planning on releasing its report investigating allegations of sexual misconduct and alleged drug use by former Rep. Matt Gaetz, but the panel canceled its meeting Friday, and no report has appeared.
foxnews.com
This Keurig K-Elite K-Cup Coffee Maker is at its lowest price of the year ahead of Black Friday
Coffee, anyone?
nypost.com
House Speaker Mike Johnson ‘strongly’ requests ethics panel not issue report on Matt Gaetz sex misconduct allegations
The Louisianan argued that releasing a report on a now-former House member "would be a terrible precedent to set."
nypost.com
L.A. new-music groups tackle election angst with a chance to let it all out
Concerts by Wild Up at MOCA's Geffen Contemporary and Brightwork newmusic at Monk Space help L.A. audiences come to terms with election results.
latimes.com
GM slashing 1K white-collar jobs in cost-cutting move to ‘focus on top priorities’
GM and other automakers have been navigating an uncertain transition to electric vehicles both in the US and worldwide.
nypost.com
Trump picks Steven Cheung to run White House communications
Cheung, a former spokesperson for the Ultimate Fighting Championship, brought a cage fighter's spirit to speaking on behalf of Trump during the campaign.
npr.org
'Not committed': Conservatives warn Mike Johnson still has hill to climb before winning speaker's gavel
Some conservatives are warning that House Speaker Mike Johnson may still have to prove himself before a House-wide speaker vote in January.
foxnews.com
Trump seemingly moving forward with Hegseth nomination amid news of past sexual assault probe
Trump communications director Steven Cheung on Friday expressed support for defense secretary pick Pete Hegseth after news broke of a sexual assault allegation Hegseth was investigated for in 2017. CBS News political reporter Jake Rosen has the latest.
cbsnews.com
Jerry Seinfeld calls into live radio show after hosts slam iconic sitcom
Jerry Seinfeld called into a live radio show to defend his '90s sitcom after the hosts criticized the show. "Seinfeld" ran from 1989 until 1998.
1 h
foxnews.com
Stream It Or Skip It: ‘The Creep Tapes’ on Shudder, a Six-Episode Spinoff of the ‘Creep’ Movies, Starring a Deranged Mark Duplass
While we wait for Creep 3 (well, maybe YOU'RE waiting for it), this series gives us a few fresh kills.
1 h
nypost.com
NY bakery says boiler breakdown, not politics, blocked Whoopi Goldberg buying cupcakes
1 h
foxnews.com
It may take years for Prospect Park wildlife to return after area torched by NYC brush fire: experts
"Wildfires cause wildlife to move; they’ll avoid active flames and, if the damage is severe, will seek new habitats for food and shelter."
1 h
nypost.com
Mike Tyson slaps ‘f–king a–hole’ YouTuber Jake Paul across the face in pre-fight outburst
The “Jake Paul vs. Mike Tyson” headline fight kicks off Friday at 8 p.m. ET on Netflix.
1 h
nypost.com
Animal rescuers evacuate a lion cub from war-torn Lebanon to South Africa
The group Animals Lebanon says it rescued Sara the lion cub from abuse by a Lebanese social media influencer, kept it safe in Beirut and sent it to a wildlife sanctuary in South Africa.
1 h
npr.org