How MAGA Media Is Like Improv Theater

from the yes-and dept

If you’ve ever wondered how the right-wing media ecosystem operates and why it’s effective, try viewing it as a form of improvisational theater or improv.

In the wake of the 2024 U.S. elections, everyday people and political pundits alike have been trying to make sense of the results and the related observation that many Americans seem to be experiencing very different realities. These realities are shaped by very different media ecosystems.

Democrats tend to trust institutional media and network news more than Republicans. In contrast, Republicans have developed what they see as a more trustworthy and explicitly partisan alternative media ecosystem that has rapidly evolved and flourished in the internet era.

Cultivating robust alternative media has been a political strategy of the right for decades. Given the interactive nature of social media and ongoing investments by the right in digital media, the right-wing media ecosystem has become a highly participatory space filled with influencers, political elites and audiences.

These players engage in year-round conversations that inspire and adapt political messaging. The collaborations are not tightly scripted but improvised, facilitated by the interactivity of digital media.

For all these reasons, we, as researchers of information ecosystems and influencer culture, find it useful to think of right-wing media as a kind of improv theater. This metaphor helps us understand the social and digital structure, culture and persuasive power of right-wing influence, which is reshaping politics in the U.S. and around the world.

Elements of improv in right-wing media

Influencers are the performers in this real-life improv show that plays out on a stage of social media newsfeeds, podcasts, cable newsrooms and partisan online media outlets. The performers include political pundits and media personalities as well as a dynamic group of online opinion leaders who often ascend from the audience to the stage, in part by recognizing and exploiting the dynamics of digital media.

These influencers work together, performing a variety of roles based on a set of informal rules and performance conventions: sharing vague but emotionally resonant memes, “just asking questions” to each other, trolling a journalist, “evidencing” claims with data or photos – sometimes taken out of context – all the while engaging each other’s content.

Just as in improv, performers work daily to find a game from their audience, internet forums and each other. The “game” in improv is a concept or story with a novel element around which a performance revolves. Once a compelling game is found, performers “raise the stakes,” another improv concept where the plot intensifies and expands.

Performers follow a loose script, collaborating toward a shared goal. Digital media environments provide additional infrastructure — the platform features, networks and algorithms — that shapes the performances.

Their performances, both individual and in interaction with each other, help influencers attract and curate an audience they are highly in tune with. As in improv shows, the political performers may use a technique called a callback: referencing a previous line, exchange or game that the audience is familiar with. Or performers might react to calls from an engaged audience that cheers, jeers and steers the actors as the show unfolds. The audience may also prompt an entire skit by bringing a story to the attention of influencers or politicians.

From this perspective, influence doesn’t just flow from influencers on stage and out to the audience, but also flows from the audience to the influencers. These dynamics make the right-wing media ecosystem extremely reactive. Feedback is instant, and the right “bits” get laughs and likes. Influencers — and political leaders — can quickly adapt their messaging to their audiences’ tastes, preferences and grievances, as well as to the events and trends of the day, unencumbered by the lag of traditional news media.

Actors and audiences in right-wing media also engage in transgressive, controversial or even offensive bits, as they test the boundaries of their shared tastes, expectations and — for the political performers — ideologies.

Like a lot of improv shows, these performances feel intimate and authentic. Audience members can talk to the performers after and sometimes during the show. They can also be invited “on stage” when an influencer elevates their content.

It may be just for a single scene, but there is also opportunity for lucky, savvy or persistent contributors to become part of the theater of influencers. This increases the motivation to participate, the excitement and the sense among audience members that they are truly part of the show.

‘They’re eating the pets’

One example of right-wing media as improv came in fall 2024 when then-candidate Donald Trump baselessly claimed from a debate stage that Haitian immigrants in Springfield, Ohio, were stealing and eating pets.

Prior to Trump referencing them, rumors of pet-eating had been circulating in local Springfield Facebook groups. These claims were amplified when a local neo-Nazi leader discussed the issue in a recorded town hall meeting, which circulated in apps like Telegram and Gab. Influencers who monitor these channels elevated the story, finding a new game with a novel element.

A Reddit post of a photo of a man holding a bird walking down the street was taken out of context by influencers and falsely used as “evidence” of immigrants eating pets. Memes, particularly those made by artificial intelligence, started spreading rapidly, catching the attention of politicians including Sen. Ted Cruz and Rep. Marjorie Taylor-Greene, who shared them. This raised the stakes of the improv game by tying these smaller memes to a larger political narrative about needing to stop migration at the southern border.

The improv act reached its zenith when Trump and then vice presidential candidate JD Vance elevated the claims during the week of the September debate. They presented the claims with both seriousness and a bit of a tongue-in-cheek awareness that the point of the story was not necessarily about immigrants but about the attention the narrative garnered. Vance even acknowledged the whole thing could “turn out to be false.” Veracity was not the point of this improvisation.

Growing body of research

The metaphor of right-wing media as improv emerged through research, conversation and collaboration facilitated by the University of Washington’s Center for an Informed Public, where we work.

One of us, Kate Starbird, and colleagues studied the role of political influencers in election-denying rumors after the 2020 election, finding right-wing political campaigns to be participatory efforts that were largely improvised. In related work, media researcher Anna Beers described how a “theater of influencers” on the right could be identified through their interactions with a shared audience.

Doctoral student Stephen Prochaska and colleagues built on sociologist Arlie Hochschild’s work to characterize the production of election fraud narratives in 2020 as “deep storytelling” – telling stories with strong emotional resonance – between right-wing influencers and their online audiences.

In her study of right-wing influencers, one of us, Danielle Lee Tomson, described the performative collaboration between influencers as kayfabe, a performance convention in professional wrestling of wrestlers agreeing on a story arc before a seemingly real wrestling match.

These studies all draw on different theories and apply different methods, but they converge on the ideas of improvisation, style and participatory audiences as integral to the success of right-wing media ecosystems.

A persuasive performance

In political improv, factuality is less important than the compelling nature of the performance, the actors, the big story arc and the aesthetic. The storylines can be riveting, engaging and participatory, allowing audiences to play their own role in a grand epic of American activism.

When considered this way, the persuasive power of right-wing media to everyday Americans comes into fuller focus. When there is a 24/7 chorus of collaborative internet influencers engaging their audiences directly, institutional media begins to feel too far removed and disengaged to have a comparable effect.

Danielle Lee Tomson, Research Manager, Center for an Informed Public, University of Washington and Kate Starbird, Professor of Human Centered Design & Engineering, University of Washington

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:2

Howdy, I’m the actual guy who tried to raise the issue of Singal and the free passes he’s gotten from Bluesky in the comments section on Techdirt last week. You’re impersonating me, and spreading lies in the process, acting like a bad-faith troll. I think my comments on last week’s episode of Ctrl-Alt-Speech were a better place to try and raise the issue given that it’s a podcast about Trust & Safety, Free Speech, and Content Moderation, and it was very conspicuous, IMO, that they did not talk about it. I tried to stay away from raising the issue off-topic on other comment sections from there on out.

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Anonymous Coward says:

Well, yeah — I’d differentiate it like this:

More liberal-facing people tend to refer to peer-reviewed data that they use to make informed statements which they can then back up with the sources they used to form the opinions.

More conservative-facing people tend to be shaped by what the people in their circles of influence say. They trust what’s in their head more than data in a spreadsheet. To back up their perspectives, they don’t tend to go to the sources that shaped their perspective, but instead search for sources after the fact that support what they’ve already said, based on what they already “knew”.

This is one of the major differentiators between the liberal and conservative mindsets. There have been countless studies into the psychology, sociology and ramifications of it, and it’s something conservative politicians are very aware of and happy to leverage.

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Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

First, no, that’s not peer-reviewed. You’re using a discussion of academic research to make a stupid political statement. The Hunter Biden evidence wasn’t reviewed by academics who published in a peer-reviewed journal.

Second, it was Russian disinformation. Parts of it being true doesn’t make it not a Russian disinformation campaign. Did you not understand that? That said, all the “damning” parts of the story were false. Burisma was a giant lie and someone’s going to jail for lying about it.

Clearly you should have gone to college to learn both about academic research and propaganda.

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Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

More liberal-facing people tend to refer to peer-reviewed data that they use to make informed statements which they can then back up with the sources they used to form the opinions.

I’m definitely in that camp. Many’s the time I’ve stated an opinion based the information I have at the time, checked and found my information to be incorrect, and restated my opinion based on the updated information.

Anonymous Coward says:

Some studies show that people educated with the Bible have more difficulties to discern tales from reality.
By telling what they’ll not refuse to listen and what they want to heard, you can have a bunch of people on your side.
The Promised Land, the returned of the Savior, the prevention of the Apocalypse. Basically anything.
That’s pretty much the same promises from Coca-cola, McDonalds, Nike and Amazon are making.
Heaven on Earth, good life, kindness. Just sign for it.
(Warning: The actual product performance may not match marketing claims.)

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Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

Most of those studies are rather… slanted. The issue isn’t the Bible, it’s the method of education. If someone is educated from the Bible including the translator’s notes and preface at the start, and taught how the work was created, and the difference between poetry, epistolaries, the recording of oral traditions and the like, the Bible can be quite a useful educational tool, especially as in English it was key to the formation of the modern English language.

But people “educated” via the Bible, with specially selected passages with out of context interpretations… yeah, you’re basically teaching people to trust the presenter more than their own intellect and the provided work. As you state, the same could be done with pretty much any written work out there. Make some claims of health and wealth, and back it up with, say, the collected works of William Shakespeare.

mick says:

Re:

Some studies show that people educated with the Bible have more difficulties to discern tales from reality.

I’m as atheistic as they come, but anyone who makes a claim about “studies show” and don’t link to any studies is a POS.

While I’m here, people who watch their news instead of reading it from decent sources is dumb, and the whole problem with the US. News isn’t entertainment.

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Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:9

You know how I can tell you don’t have a great life? People who are genuinely happy aren’t desperate to laugh at people who aren’t. You’re happy the way a middle school bully is happy, by which I mean, you have significant unresolved issues and you’re avoiding dealing with them.

Every time you post about how happy you supposedly are, you’re proving you’re not.

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Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:3

Assume Trump has told the truth about everything he plans to do. Now assume he actually does it, to the point where he can accomplish everything he promised within the first 100 days of his second term.

What do you think will happen to the economy if he enacts all the tariffs he wants to enact, deports millions of people (including the people who work for less than minimum wage in the agriculture industry), and starts trade wars for the sake of acting like he’s got a big dick? I’ll tell you what’ll happen: Everything you want and need to buy⁠—from groceries to gas to electronics⁠—will get a lot more expensive. That means more of your hard-earned money will go towards paying the tariffs that Trump said other countries would pay. (He lied about that, by the way.)

And don’t expect your paycheck to get bigger so you can afford those necessities. You live in a society running on late-stage capitalism. The C-Suite execs are more likely to give themselves bonuses off the backs of record profits than they are to give you and the rest of the working class raises. You’ll have to stretch your paychecks thinner and thinner until you have to start making hard decisions⁠—like, say, whether to pay your rent or buy some groceries.

“Oh, but the social safety net will catch me!” you might think. To which I reply: What net? Between conservative efforts to minimize the help given to people by the government, the Trumpian desire to privatize public services like the Postal Service, and the Republican desire to “balance the budget” by slashing entitlements like Social Service, what little safety net this country has isn’t exactly stable. Hell, if you wanna get really real, imagine for a moment that you suddenly become disabled in a car accident or some shit. If you want to collect disability after that happens, you’re not going to get it as easy as asking for it⁠—and keeping disability benefits will be more work than you know, because a lot of strings come attached to those benefits. And by the by? Of all the marginalized demographics in the world, “disabled people” is the one that, on a long enough timeline, you will end up joining.

And hey, since we’re on the subject of healthcare: Yeah, no, Trump isn’t going to do shit to improve the healthcare system in this country. Trump has more in common with the dead CEO of UnitedHealthcare than he ever has and ever will with the guy who killed that CEO. And given how much he and his conservative cohorts both inside and outside of the government want to roll back regulations and such (e.g., vaccine mandates for children, tracking maternal deaths), you can expect the level of healthcare in this country to get worse. And that’s not even getting into the anti-vaxx nonsense that conservatives both powerful and not have been buying into for the past few years, which is a special brand of dangerous.

And speaking of cutting regulations: Sure, let’s do that for all the major industries~! Nothing could go wrong by loosening regulations for food handling or child labor or constructing airplanes~. I mean, it’s not like we’re going to have massive disease outbreaks or children working in slaughterhouses or planes falling apart in mid-air, right~?

(I could go even further with this, such as touching on the far-right theocratic desire to privatize education so kids can be funneled into religious schools, but I think I’ve made my point, which is…)

You can be part of every privileged group in this nation and still suffer from the negative consequences of the Trump administration. Nothing about who you are can or will protect you from what you have no power to change. Like I said: I hope you get everything you wanted from Donald Trump that he promised to give you⁠—every tariff, every deportation, every slashed benefit, every cut regulation, all of it. Victory will have its price, and it will trickle down to you in due time. But don’t expect Trump to pay that price for you. He never has; he never will.

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Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:4

HaHave you heard the good news? Jessie Singal has been baHave you heard the good news? Jessie Singal has been HHave you heard the good news? Jessie Singal has been banned from Bluesky! YEAHHHH!
Have you heard the good news? Jessie Singal has been banned from Bluesky! YEAHHHH!

ssie Singal has been banned from Bluesky! YEAHHHH!

Have you heard the good news? Jessie Singal has been banned from Bluesky! YEAHHHH!

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That One Guy (profile) says:

Re: Re: 'Why is my EVERYTHING more expensive and worse?!'

MAGAts are in line to get everything they ever asked for only to find out too late how little of it they actually wanted, alongside a slew of people who are done with showing sympathy towards their self-inflicted suffering.

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Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:2

Do you also want camps for people who provide gender-affirming surgeries to cisgender children (e.g., breast augmentations for teenage girls)? I mean, if you’re going to fuck around with jailing people for providing gender-affirming therapy of any kind, we should at least find out if your prinicples apply to doctors that put 14-year-old girls under the knife for a pair of fake tits.

Oh, and does that “mutilate children” thing also apply to doctors who perform female genital mutilations on cisgender girls, too?

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Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:6

The thing is, if the camps get built, those that are filling them up will get on a roll and plenty of people will get swept up in it who you think shouldn’t be there, but it’ll be too late. It might even be you. Someone will say you looked at the commandant funny. Maybe you’re secretly unamerican. Maybe the facemeat supply is running low and the leopards are hungry.

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n00bdragon (profile) says:

I think you’re putting way too much thought into this. The right wing media ecosystem exists because the left wing media ecosystem pushed them out. Now, you might say (correctly even) that the left wing media ecosystem was uninterested in entertaining bald faced lies by a bunch of snake oil salesmen and sex pests, but the fact remains that this is how it happened. They drove the crazies out of the public square only to find out that there were more crazies than they anticipated and, left to their own devices, they got crazier. There’s no “art of improv” going on in the right wing. That’s just the only thing they have going.

If the left wants to win hearts and minds of people it needs to show that it produce effective, trustworthy leaders who will pull marginal people into goodness rather than purge them for their sins.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

If the left wants to win hearts and minds of people it needs to show that it produce effective, trustworthy leaders who will pull marginal people into goodness rather than purge them for their sins.

They tried that, but the majority of the American electorate decided “Better the devil you know” rather than vote for Kamala Harris anyway.

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That One Guy (profile) says:

One side lives in reality, the other does not

In the wake of the 2024 U.S. elections, everyday people and political pundits alike have been trying to make sense of the results and the related observation that many Americans seem to be experiencing very different realities. These realities are shaped by very different media ecosystems.

It’s really not that difficult so long as you’re willing to call a spade a spade, or as the case may be a bigot/lunatic a bigot/lunatic.

One side was highly energetic, had extreme group solidarity supported by a ‘You’re either fully on our side or you’re a traitor’ mindset, cared more about what felt good to them than demonstrable reality, and gave blanket cover for terrible people to be terrible people without having to feel guilty about it because if it was good enough for the head of their party then it was good enough for them.

On the other side you had the democrats/independents, who much like republicans can’t seem to stop shooting themselves in the foot or read the room but unlike republicans have a bunch of people that actually care about that sort of thing and are so short-sighted that they’re willing to let the greater evil win because they just couldn’t stomach voting for someone that didn’t agree with them on everything.

Highly motivated but terrible people vs unmotivated and/or ‘Perfect is the enemy of good enough’ ones. Even setting aside the vote rigging that was going on before/during the election it’s not too hard to see how we arrived at this point.

Anonymous Coward says:

A Reddit post of a photo of a man holding a bird walking down the street was taken out of context by influencers and falsely used as “evidence” of immigrants eating pets.

Talking of that one, the bird in question was a goose. Since geese have traditionally been seen as food (they used to be traditionally served for Christmas dinner in England before turkey started taking over after the publication of Dickens’ A Christmas Carol), I would view an individual goose as livestock unless someone explicitly told me it was a pet.

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Trump Card says:

re: How MAGA Media Is Like Improv Theater

Another liberal site that couldn’t see the truth if it smacked them in the face. Trying to find any excuse you can that you think explains how Harris lost the election. You can’t admit it that she was the worse possible candidate they could have hand picked. There are popular liberals who have, since the election, come out and started to see that she was a joke. She wants to be President but can’t competently run a campaign? Just go back to getting your opinions from MSNBC.

Oh and where is the article about ABC News having to pay Trump $15 million in the defamation suite ? I guess that is just another example of how conservative is reporting the news from a logical standpoint.

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