The Cheerleader Press: How Trump Bullied the Free Press into Pom-Poms and Propaganda

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đź§· Detailed Breakdown

I. Legacy of Independent Journalism

Point Made: Playboy and Rolling Stone once led civil rights, women’s rights, and voter rights coverage.

  • Clarified Truth: Despite pop culture jokes, Playboy Magazine published serious, revolutionary content. MLK, Malcolm X, and Alex Haley all appeared in its pages. The same goes for Rolling Stone, which had hard-hitting political coverage.
  • Historical Context: In the 1960s–1980s, independent magazines were often the ones giving voice to marginalized communities and radical truths. That’s now rare.

“If you’ve ever heard of Malcolm X or Martin Luther King—you read Playboy magazine, because that’s where they were.”


II. The Death of the Free Press

Point Made: Media consolidation killed independent voices. Journalism is on life support.

  • Key Fact: Today, six corporations own about 90–95% of U.S. media content: Comcast, Disney, News Corp, Warner Bros Discovery, Paramount Global, and Sony.
  • Who’s to blame? Michael Powell (Colin Powell’s son), during his time as FCC chair under George W. Bush, gutted ownership rules, allowing megamergers and conglomerates to dominate local media.

“Ben Bagdikian said: If you want diversity of opinion, you need diversity of ownership.”


III. The Trump Propaganda Machine

Point Made: Trump controls the press pool, avoids tough questions, and surrounds himself with cheerleaders and racists.

  • White House Shift: No longer about accountability—it’s PR theater. Access journalism replaced adversarial journalism.
  • Stephen Miller: Described as a “little German” and “the biggest bigot” in the White House, Miller is called out for lying in front of the press, with no pushback.
  • Trump’s Fragile Ego: Trump can’t handle scrutiny. He demands loyalty, praise, and deliberately filters out critical voices.

“All you need to do is give [the press secretary] a pair of pom-poms and a cheerleader skirt.”


IV. Fear and Cowardice in the Press Corps

Point Made: Real journalists have been pushed out, and the few who remain are afraid to confront power.

  • Personal Experience: Karem recalls Trump and Miller literally fleeing from questions.
  • Moment of Truth: When Miller lied about a 9-0 SCOTUS ruling against Trump, no reporter pushed back. That’s a collapse of basic journalistic duty.

“They will run away from people who hold truth to power.”


V. What We’ve Lost

  • Grit. Courage. Access. Truth.
  • Courageous watchdog journalism has been replaced with performative questioning and infotainment.
  • What remains is a press corps more concerned about losing access than speaking truth.

đź§  Expert Analysis: What This All Means

1. Journalism’s Failure Is Structural

This isn’t about bad reporters—it’s about a rigged system:

  • Corporate media doesn’t want confrontation. It wants access, ad revenue, and safe narratives.
  • Independent media has been decimated—there’s nowhere left to speak freely without risk of cancellation, loss of access, or corporate pressure.

2. Trump’s Genius Was in Gaming the System

  • He didn’t just attack the press—he replaced it with his own apparatus: Fox, Truth Social, Breitbart, OAN.
  • He curated who could ask questions, filtered adversarial voices, and demanded loyalty as the price of access.

3. There’s a Vacuum Where Courage Used to Be

  • Karem is naming what many journalists feel but can’t say publicly:
    • Fear of retaliation
    • Fear of being blackballed
    • Fear of standing alone

But without adversarial journalism, democracy rots.

“Anybody who’s going to hold him accountable is gone.”


✊🏽 Final Thought: Why This Rant Matters

Brian Karem isn’t just venting—he’s mourning a profession. This monologue is a eulogy for the golden age of press freedom, when journalists didn’t just report—they confronted power, uncovered truth, and gave voice to the voiceless.

In an age of PR propaganda, billionaire-owned media, and algorithmically-optimized clickbait, this kind of raw truth-telling is almost extinct.

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