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Today: April 11, 2025

Trump is making himself inescapable

February 09, 2025
Analysis Brian Stelter - CNN

NEW ORLEANS (CNN) โ€” Last year, President Joe Biden passed up a chance to be interviewed on the highly rated Super Bowl pregame show. This year, not only is President Donald Trump being interviewed, he is coming here for the big game in person.

By becoming the first sitting president to attend a Super Bowl, Trump is turning the NFLโ€™s biggest spectacle of the year into another episode of โ€œThe Trump Show.โ€

The show has been on seemingly 24/7 since the inauguration last month. It takes many forms: news conferences, contentious announcements, AI-generated memes and all-caps Truth Social posts. All of it makes Trump the proverbial main character.

โ€œIโ€™ve been so busy that itโ€™s hard to believe,โ€ he said at the National Prayer Breakfast on Thursday, prompting knowing laughter from the audience.

Every new president generates a lot of news, but something feels different this time. To the delight of his fans and dismay of his detractors, Trump has made so many pronouncements and held so many press Q&Aโ€™s that he has been all but impossible to avoid.

Think about it: A year ago you could go days without seeing or thinking about Biden. Youโ€™re lucky if you can go hours without thinking about Trump. And thatโ€™s just how he likes it.

White House aides have indicated the presidentโ€™s ubiquity is partly a strategy to impress Republican voters and disorient Democratic opponents.

During White House press secretary Karoline Leavittโ€™s first briefing on January 28, she proudly brought along a headline about his omnipresence. โ€œPolitico summed it up best: โ€˜Trump is everywhere again.โ€™ And thatโ€™s because President Trump has a great story to tell,โ€ she said.

Trumpโ€™s long history of courting media attention suggests that itโ€™s also partly about satiating his own ego.

In the new book about attention, โ€œThe Sirensโ€™ Call,โ€ MSNBC anchor Chris Hayes argued that Trumpโ€™s psychological needs are โ€œso bottomlessโ€ that โ€œheโ€™ll take attention in whatever form he can get. Heโ€™ll take condemnation, rebuke, disgust, as long as youโ€™re thinking about him.โ€

Conversely, Trump boosters often argue that liberals play right into his hands by obsessing over all things Trump.

A strongman technique?

History professor Ruth Ben-Ghiat, author of โ€œStrongmen: Mussolini to the Present,โ€ told CNN that Trump has a โ€œpersonality cultโ€ that views him as both a man of the people and a demigod, and his visibility is a key component.

โ€œThe strongman must appear not just omnipotent but also omnipresent, he is everywhere,โ€ she said.

Trump seems to welcome every opportunity to show off his stamina and strike a contrast with Biden, even months after defeating him.

โ€œHe knows his base and how simple they are,โ€ CNN contributor Cari Champion said during a recent โ€œNewsNightโ€ discussion of the โ€œoptics presidencyโ€ and how effective itโ€™s been.

Trump โ€œknows how to entertain them and itโ€™s working,โ€ she said.

In a Truth Social post on Friday, Trump previewed his Super Bowl pregame interview with Fox News anchor Bret Baier, which was recorded Saturday at Mar-a-Lago. โ€œThere hasnโ€™t been one in four years (Gee, I wonder why?),โ€ Trump wrote. (Biden participated in the pre-game tradition in 2021 and 2022.)

Even Biden would probably admit that Trump has superior attention-getting skills. Since retaking office, Trump has created so much purposeful chaos โ€” including at federal agencies that are being gutted by the day โ€” that journalists can barely keep up. News producers who wake up in the morning to prep an evening show know that many of the political stories will change by airtime.

This, of course, is what 2017 felt like. CNN even penned a similar story back then: โ€œThe inescapable Donald Trump.โ€

Google Trends search data shows that interest in Trump news peaked in 2017, then dissipated for the other three years of his first term, and then only spiked again when he tried to stay in office following his 2020 election loss. Interest is back at those 2020 levels now, but not quite as high as 2017, according to Google Trends.

Democratic strategist James Carville, who grew up in Louisiana and spends much of his time in New Orleans, said Trump being โ€œwhite hotโ€ would ultimately redound to the Democratsโ€™ benefit.

Channeling Muhammad Aliโ€™s famous โ€œrope-a-dopeโ€ tactic, Carville said of Trump, โ€œjust go ahead and punch yourself out the first five rounds.โ€

Flooding the zone with cultural fights

Many of Trumpโ€™s events, and even some of his executive orders, are as much about performing the role of president as about changing government policy.

In an influential essay on his Marginal Revolution blog, Tyler Cowen wrote that Trumpโ€™s incessant posts and photo ops are โ€œinvestments in changing the culture.โ€

Trumpโ€™s strategy, he wrote, seems to be the following: โ€œEvery time the policy or policy debate pushes culture in what you think is the right direction, just do it. Do it in the view that the cultural factors will, over some time horizon, surpass everything else in import. Simply pass or announce or promise such policies. Do not worry about any other constraints. You donโ€™t even have to do them! They donโ€™t even all have to be legal! (Illegal might provoke more discussion.) They donโ€™t all have to persist!โ€

Flooding the zone with the fights is โ€œhow you have an impact in an internet-intensive, attention-at-a-premium world,โ€ Cowen wrote.

For Trumpโ€™s fans, it feels like nonstop โ€œwinning.โ€

Clay Travis, the conservative radio host and founder of OutKick, which bills itself as the โ€œantidote to the mainstream sports media,โ€ told CNN that Trumpโ€™s attendance at the Super Bowl was reflective of a โ€œmajor vibe shiftโ€ in Trumpโ€™s favor.

โ€œIโ€™d even go so far as to say a majority of NFL players, owners and execs support himโ€ now, he said.

Young men have also swung toward Trump in significant numbers.

โ€œItโ€™s night and day between what we saw with sports in 2017, when many athletes openly attacked Trump,โ€ Travis said. โ€œI expect Trump to be cheered in the stadium and for USA chants to break out.โ€

The Super Bowl, in so many ways, symbolizes American culture, from the combat on the field to the consumerism of the $8 million 30-second commercials. No wonder itโ€™s where Trump wants to be on Sunday night: Itโ€™s the biggest show in the world.

The-CNN-Wire
โ„ข & ยฉ 2025 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

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