Three years later, the situation has changed completely, and precisely thanks to figures like Bruesewitz. This consultant, barely 27 years old, is an advisor to Donald Trump and was one of the architects of the podcast interview strategy that positioned the current president among young people under 30 during the 2024 election campaign. Between June and October, Trump gave 18 interviews on these platforms, while his rival, Kamala Harris, appeared in only four.
Today, I choose violence, he wrote. Literally. I know calls for violence are generally frowned upon, he added. The issue is I simply don't care. Ingersoll's argument was that the cost of anti-social and subversive behavior was not high enough, and in his opinion, some of this cost needs to be summary and ultra-violent. The law is not enough, he declared, and reiterated that he was literally calling for violence, writing, Is this a call for violence? Yes. Explicitly it is.
Jessica Reed Kraus likes to talk about the power of gossip and "quality conspiracy." The Substack and Instagram star, who writes under the handle "House Inhabit," became an unlikely powerhouse within the world of conservative media by providing her readers-many of them women-with just that. Although Kraus isn't a household name, she's famous to a slice of Americans; she told me that her Instagram stories can get more than a hundred million monthly views.
"What he would want more than anything is for people to channel their anger into proper activism," Bowyer told Johnson, a few minutes later advising viewers: "Consider yesterday that moment-that turning point for you-of thinking about getting involved in your local community or running for office."
And there's the end of Nike's famous imperative, "Just Do It," which will change to "Why Do It?" One could ask the same question of Nike's decision. But "it's not just a slogan," says Nike CMO Nicole Graham. "It's really a mindset and almost kind of a spiritual thing. It's like meditation or yoga. It's something that has so much reverence and beauty, but it's your job to continue to contemporize it and channel it in new dimensions."
There is no doubt that the Post will play a crucial role in engaging and enlightening readers, who are starved of serious reporting and puckish wit. Robert Thomson portrayed California as plagued by jaundiced, jaded journalism.
Edwin Brant Frost IV is accused of running a $140 million Ponzi scheme, targeting Republican activists through advertisements on conservative media, according to the SEC.