Hello and welcome to Regulator.
Happy New York City mayoral election day to everyone who’s voting, watching from afar, or just here for the memes. And happy 35th day of the federal government shutdown, which, as of today, is tied for the longest shutdown in history. But let’s step back for a second, because there’s something these two seemingly unrelated events have in common.
Back in 2018, two things were constantly in my social media diet: viral videos from WorldStarHipHop.com of people getting into physical fights, and Donald Trump and MAGA influencers instigating Twitter flame wars. Though the content originated from vastly different communities, their most viral posts shared the same qualities: they had to feature a shocking fight, and they had to make their intended audience feel a vicious, vicarious glee about how thoroughly the loser had been beaten up — to the point that no one felt any sympathy toward the loser at all.
Flash forward seven years, and “WorldStar politics,” as I was calling it back then, has not only entered the mainstream, it’s become an established political norm in America.
We still won’t know the results of the hotly contested mayoral race by the time this email’s been sent out, but one thing is for certain. Whether or not he wins, Zohran Mamdani’s skills as a digital communicator — which is kind of like an online influencer, but with much higher societal stakes — did force his primary rival, disgraced former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, to adopt what The New York Times called a “fresh social media persona” to fight Mamdani and his army online. Whether or not Cuomo succeeded at his fresh, new social media persona will only be truly answered once all the votes are tallied. But the fact Cuomo himself had to adapt to internet culture in order to get back into the race underscores a fundamental change in elections and politics. It’s no longer enough to outsource their online presence to an army of 20-something-year-olds churning out memes on their behalf: candidates need to prove that they, themselves, are savvy digital communicators.
But it’s not like the 20-something-year-olds won’t lack for work. Although Trump himself is a uniquely singular media figure whose campaigns and presidency have set the standard for how low digital content could go without turning into a complete political liability, his influence has seeped deep into the federal government itself. The MAGA college students and aspiring influencers who watched him run for president in 2016 are now staffing his communications offices across the administration in 2025.
“Senate Democrats have now voted 13 times to not fund the food stamp program, also known as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP). Bottom line, the well has run dry. At this time, there will be no benefits issued November 01. We are approaching an inflection point for Senate Democrats. They can continue to hold out for healthcare for illegal aliens and gender mutilation procedures or reopen the government so mothers, babies, and the most vulnerable among us can receive critical nutrition assistance.”
Politicizing a federal agency’s webpage like this would have been unthinkable in all previous administrations — especially under dire conditions such as a federal government shutdown. But under MAGA WorldStar rules, a .gov webpage is still ultimately a webpage that millions of desperate people will visit. And if you’re a president hell-bent on politicizing the entire federal apparatus to crush your enemies, you might as well treat high-traffic websites you own as a free billboard — and add some shock value to it, too.
This week at The Verge:
And now, Recess.
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