This is an adapted excerpt from the Jan. 8 episode of “The Beat with Ari Melber.”
There are many issues with Donald Trump’s Venezuela policy — from the risk of invading a country and extracting a foreign leader to claiming war powers for oil to the apparent total failure to plan for the long term.
But one of the most troubling aspects of the president’s recent actions is how he and his team seem more focused on PR and internet hype than on the actual policies they are enacting.
After the U.S. military’s operation in Venezuela, the White House wasted no time in flooding social media with photos, including one posted by Trump himself on Truth Social, showing President Nicolás Maduro bound and blindfolded aboard a ship. MS NOW has not independently verified the photo.
The photos quickly drew plenty of mockery, with some suggesting the administration’s glee reflects an interest in the spectacle over the substance and stakes.
The president also posted photos of a makeshift Situation Room. The U.S. oversees 17 different intelligence agencies, but it appears Trump’s team chose to take space away from those sources.
During the operation, which killed dozens on the ground and put American soldiers at risk, a feed of the social media app X — formerly known as Twitter and run by former White House temporary employee Elon Musk — could be seen displayed on a television in the room. The feed showed “Venezuela” in the search bar and a giant emoji of a face holding back tears.
The photos drew plenty of mockery, with some suggesting the administration’s glee reflects an interest in the spectacle over the substance and stakes.
One writer, Don Moynihan, has likened this to a “Clicktatorship.” In a piece on Substack, Moynihan wrote that the “Trump administration isn’t just using social media to shape a narrative,” but instead argued that “many of its members are deeply addicted to it.”
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem’s and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s social media obsessions have made them frequent targets of “South Park.” In the show, Hegseth is shown carrying around a selfie stick to film his department’s operations and urging viewers to “like and subscribe.”
The program is supposed to be a parody, but the reality isn’t too far off.
A prominent Justice Department official who runs the Civil Rights division recently posted to social media asking, “What kind of content do my folks want to see more of to like and share?”
Up top, the head of the Justice Department, Attorney General Pam Bondi, was busted for bringing notes to a Senate hearing, seemingly meant to help generate viral zingers — which senators noticed.








