Pop culture and satire media really can have a large impact
on the way people view others, especially those who are in politics. The pop
culture that the public is exposed to is another way for someone to push more
campaign material without the public really being aware that they are being
exposed to such material. Since the media in the current age is more liberal it
was evident that the republican presidential candidate Donald Trump would be
the topic of many late night and SNL jokes.
The artifact from pop culture that I used was a skit from a
Saturday Night Live episode. This was an opening skit that portrayed Trump’s
first presidential elect press conference. The
ever so funny Alec Baldwin
played Donald Trump. Alec really embodies Trump and emphasizes some of his
characteristics in order to really make the audience aware of these
exaggerations when observing Trump’s actions in reality throughout the campaign
and his political career.
This SNL video and many other SNL skits with Alec Baldwin
playing Trump all have a pattern of how Trump is portrayed. Alec has the orange
skin and the fluffed up hair that looks like a wig but is apparently not a wig
while he wears the red power tie and navy blue suit. Image may be viewed as
unimportant, however his image and other candidate’s images are what they are
identified by. Trump’s get-up was the tagline for many jokes, which was
something that took away from his and Hillary Clinton’s platform. The emphasis
and importance placed upon a candidate’s image is extremely superficial, but it
is a facet that the audience and media gravitate towards for placing judgment.
In this clip from SNL they recreate a moment that is crucial
to the president elect’s political timeline. This is the moment that he is
being asked to represent all Americans while being able to articulate reasoning
for some of his early actions that were taken. In the address itself Baldwin
tries to convey to the audience Trump’s use of short charged phrases and his
ability to get questions from the media and completely spin what he would talk
about to fit his agenda. Baldwin takes on Trumps facial expressions and hand gestures.The SNL skit also emphasizes Trumps inability to speak
in eloquent phrases, his rhetoric is more common to lower educated individuals.
This SNL satire piece takes away from the image Trump would
assume want to protect. Throughout the entirety of the presidential campaign
Trump definitely had some not so great media coverage. The SNL skit I think
mostly shows Trump as a caricature figure that doesn’t seem real. He is like
the cockroach that never died within the campaign and I think his success as a
candidate was underestimated because of how he was represented in the media
prior to running. I don’t think that pieces like this SNL one really severely
hurt him however. After all of the media and pop culture out there he was still
victorious which I think goes to show how the public uses these outlets for
entertainment but know better than to judge a candidates legitimacy from this
type of media.
This clip does effectively change the way people perceive
Donald Trump. Alec Baldwin does do things within his characterization that
Trump does as well, but by focusing on the lesser important nuances of Trumps
characterization and making his press conferences and speeches a joke it takes
away from any validity that his points he made may have had. Exaggerations in
media on political figures in some ways are like a magic trick. The magician
leads the audience to something he wants the audience to look at while with a
slight of hand hiding the facets of a characterization that may be a positive
attribute.


I definitely agree with you point about how the SNL skits affected Trump long after the skit aired! These satirical impersonations of the candidates stick in peoples minds and they exaggerate the problems they have like in Trumps case the ridiculous things he says. Good post!
ReplyDelete