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Lecture

More than Money and Algorithms: The Cultural Roots of Trump’s Alt-Media Strategy


10 Jun 2025, 5:00pm - 6:30pm

302, Professor Stuart Hall Building

Event overview

Cost None
Department Media, Communications and Cultural Studies , Centre for the Study of Global Media and Democracy
Contact N.Fenton(@gold.ac.uk)

Prof. Reece Peck, CUNY, US. More than Money and Algorithms: The Cultural Roots of Trump’s Alt-Media Strategy

This presentation examines Trump’s masculinist “alt-media strategy” in the 2024 election to explore the right’s dominance in the online media landscape. Often referred to as “the first influencer election,” post-2024 election analyses have highlighted the pivotal role alternative online media played in securing Trump’s second presidency. While some commentators have focused on the quantitative edge—such as Trump appearing on over twice as many podcasts as Harris—others have emphasized the influence of key MAGA-aligned figures, like Joe Rogan and Elon Musk. In this talk, Reece Peck, the author of Fox Populism, spotlights a less appreciated but crucial factor: Trump’s historical relationship with alternative online political media. Only politicians with deep ties to online subcultures can effectively leverage them when election season rolls around. Unlike the Democrats, who attempted to build relationships with alternative media on the fly, the MAGA movement had well-established roots in this sector, tracing back to the Republican primary of the 2016 cycle. Peck stresses the importance of a cultural-historical approach to analyzing online political media—both as an academic framework and a strategic political tool.

Reece Peck is an Associate Professor at the College of Staten Island and the CUNY Graduate Center and the author of Fox Populism: Branding Conservatism as Working Class (Cambridge, 2019). His expertise lies in conservative media, populist rhetoric, and tabloid journalism. His writing on YouTube politics has appeared in academic journals like Television and New Media and popular outlets like The Hill and Jacobin.

Dates & times

Date Time Add to calendar
10 Jun 2025 5:00pm - 6:30pm
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