Democrats have their first âBratâ candidate. What will it get them?
vox.com/culture CULTURE The Wednesday edition of the Vox Culture newsletter is all about internet culture, brought to you by senior reporter Rebecca Jennings. The Wednesday edition of the Vox Culture newsletter is all about internet culture, brought to you by senior reporter Rebecca Jennings. 𥥠Kamala IS brat ð For a very long time in American politics, the primary question of presidential candidate likability was voters asking themselves, âCould I have a beer with them?â But over the course of the social media age, a new gut check has emerged to test a presidentâs ability to capture the internetâs attention: Does this person make a good meme? After four years of a president for whom the answer was ânot reallyâ (with a minor caveat for [âDark Brandon](,â which was funny for precisely one second), Democrats now have a candidate who can actually compete with Trump in the court of internet opinion. On social media timelines the world over, Vice President Kamala Harris is currently being made into [frenzied supercuts]( where she dances, laughs, and delivers her now-iconic [metaphor about coconut trees]( as she expounds on being âunburdened by what has been.â Sheâs being [edited into pop songs]( and remixed [queening out to âBrat,â]( the [Charli xcx album thatâs become this summerâs]( biggest cultural breakout and digital shorthand for unapologetic, messy hedonism. Memeability is an ineffable quality with undeniable electoral repercussions: Obamaâs grabby slogans and punchy graphic design made him infinitely [more memeable]( than standard-issue Republicans John McCain and Mitt Romney, while Trumpâs exaggerated facial expressions and off-the-cuff remarks can admittedly be very funny (who could forget [his reaction]( to Ruth Bader Ginsburgâs death as âTiny Dancerâ played?) when theyâre not overtly cruel. In both cases, the candidatesâ ubiquitous internet presence spoke to their wider ability to capture young peopleâs attention and energy, even when the memes themselves were barely legible to the average voter. [A laughing and dancing Kamala Harris is highlighted in a green square, surrounded by a crowd of other smiling people wearing pro-Kamala t-shirts, pictured in black-and-white.] Paige Vickers/Vox Now, Democrats have been handed the blessing of completely organic Kamala memes. The out-of-context clips and creative edits of the vice president, usually steeped in at least some level of irony, gained steam following [Bidenâs disastrous performance]( at the June presidential debate, when swaths of voters were clamoring for a change in candidate and turned to the next most likely option. Suddenly, mentions of the âKHiveâ were everywhere, referring to Harrisâs supporters during her 2020 campaign, as were viral clips of Harris singing [âThe Wheels on the Bus,â]( theatrically sharing [Thanksgiving turkey recipes]( seconds before snapping to attention for an interview, and talking about her favorite subject, [Venn diagrams](. Harris is particularly prone to being memed: Many people on the internet have [described her kooky persona]( as âyour Xanned out aunt,â thanks to her propensity to burst into a high-pitched cackle at any moment. Only recently has Harris herself embraced the jokes, now that sheâs officially running for president with Bidenâs backing. Should you visit the campaignâs [account]( on X, youâll notice a lime green banner with âkamala hqâ written in the âBratâ font, an homage to the album cover. After Charli xcx [tweeted]( âkamala IS brat,â Harris followed her on both X and Instagram. Fellow Democratic politicians have followed suit, with Illinois Gov. [J.B. Pritzker asking](, âYou think I just fell out of a coconut tree?â as his way of winkingly endorsing Harris (or perhaps gunning for a VP nomination), while Hawaii Sen. [Brian Schatz posted]( a photo of himself climbing a literal coconut tree. Is this the beginning of a campaign that, for the first time since 2008, Democrats have actually found ... fun? In 2016, the MAGA crowd delighted in [memes circulated on red-pill forums]( that depicted Trump as a cartoonish strongman who was exactly as hateful and despotic as the left feared. Everything that made him invigorating to his fans â an unlikely nominee who captured a certain kind of irony-poisoned nihilistic impulse on the internet â now seems to be working in progressivesâ favor. Until recently, 2024 promised to be one of the most uninteresting elections in history. After a series of extremely unpredictable events (a [poor debate performance](, an [assassination attempt](, a [case of Covid](, and a [historic dropout)](, Harris has now filled a most unlikely role: a Democratic presidential nominee whoâs entertaining to watch, even if you donât agree with everything she stands for. This, ultimately, is the power of memeability, or the talent of a candidate to transcend politics and become a legible cultural brand. It has played a crucial role in elections since before anyone used the term: Memeability is Bill Clinton playing the saxophone on Arsenio Hall, and itâs Howard Deanâs awkward scream that lost him the 2004 Democratic nomination. Candidates have always attempted to stage this kind of virality â Hillary Clintonâs [âIâm just chilling in Cedar Rapidsâ Vine](, for one â but the moments that truly take off lock into the absurdist, chaotic energy of the internet and are almost impossible to predict. Clinton never cracked that particular formula, whereas Harris has done it while barely even trying. As Ryan Long, the 22-year-old senior at the University of Delaware who created one of the most [viral Kamala âBratâ video edits](, puts it, âSheâs the perfect candidate for the TikTok generation. Iâve gone so deep into the Kamala Harris YouTube archives, and there are just so many moments of her laughing and dancing.â The clips, he adds, stand in stark contrast to the stagnant mood coloring the Biden camp over the past year. âKamala just brings new energy and the possibility of change,â he tells me. âShe does such a good job of embodying âBratâ summer.â It wasnât long ago that Harris was dubbed âCopmalaâ by liberals and leftists [dismayed by her âtough on crimeâ criminal justice record](. The vibe online has shifted significantly since then, and the left seems ready to [embrace the absurdity]( and [make peace]( with the candidate theyâve been handed. Though [some online]( have warned the Harris campaign against leaning into the jokes and memes too heavily or risk coming across as corny and try-hard, itâs just as easy to imagine large portions of voters excited about the prospect of a candidate who can â convincingly! â laugh along with them. Perhaps progressives have finally learned from Trump, who understood that memes, even when they were theoretically unflattering, could help craft the persona that won him the presidency. Thereâs an infallibility that comes with being in on the joke, and now that the Harris campaign has joined in, the attacks from the right donât stick as they might have with a different candidate. It was the RNC who made the [four-minute video]( splicing together every time Harris used the phrase âunburdenedâ back in December. Now, the most popular quote tweet of that [post reads](, âThe RNC staffer that posted this is getting executed as we speak,â referring to how the rightâs criticisms of Harris have, so far, backfired. That Trumpâs [epithet for her is âLaughinâ Kamalaâ]( feels particularly uninspired when compared to âSleepy Joeâ and âCrooked Hillaryâ â laughing is, after all, a famously fun and good activity. The Harris campaign [even gleefully reposted]( a tweet advising Republicans to drop the âunburdenedâ jokes because â[t]heyâre going to spin that into marketing for her campaign.â What this all amounts to is a viral marketing stunt that any presidential candidate would pay millions for, but one that no strategist or ad agency could create. Itâs all entirely organic, forged from the fires of a truly bizarre and unpredictable time, and the feeling that a little chaos might be exactly what American politics needs. For once, it really does seem like we can become unburdened from what has been. And perhaps Kamala Harris will be laughing all the way to the Oval Office. Clickbait - Instagram will help researchers study its [mental health effects on teens](.
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- I was on vacation for the whole âCostco guysâ thing and frankly I still donât know what it is, but [hereâs an explainer](. One Last Thing [A screen grab of a TikTok video and open comment section.]( Live footage of [Kamala Harris discovering Chappell Roan](.
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