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Politics

Explained: why Trump’s fast-food messaging succeeds in today’s attention economy

by March 18, 2025
written by March 18, 2025
Donald Trump

Did the Joe Rogan podcast tip the scales for Donald Trump’s election win?

In an era of lightning-fast tech, shrinking attention spans, and social media’s nonstop buzz, communication has become the heartbeat of modern politics.

Leading this charge is Donald Trump, the 47th US President, whose brash, off-the-cuff, fast-food-style delivery has rewritten the rules of political messaging. The days of painstakingly polished press releases and grand speeches are fading fast.

Today’s politics thrives on the instant—short, punchy bursts that hit like a drive-thru order for a public craving quick hits over drawn-out feasts.

Trump’s command of this shift, spotlighted by his podcast blitz, including a pivotal three-hour sit-down with Joe Rogan, offers a sharp lens on how communication—an age-old skill—remains the ultimate weapon in today’s governance and electoral battles.

Take Trump’s October 25, 2024, appearance on The Joe Rogan Experience.

Clocking in at three hours, it was a marathon of unfiltered Trump.

He riffed on everything from UFOs—“I’ve got good sources, they say some wild stuff’s out there”—to his late uncle’s nuclear expertise: “Uncle John, MIT guy, he knew nukes, so I know nukes, believe me.”

Rogan, with his 14.5 million Spotify listeners, let Trump roll, barely steering the conversation.

When Trump speculated about Kamala Harris on the show—“She’d be laying on the floor, Joe, a mess”—Rogan pushed back lightly: “I’d have a fine conversation with her, just to know her as a human.”

That moment, clipped and viral with 51 million YouTube views by early 2025, underscored Trump’s knack for turning casual tangents into cultural lightning rods.

Contrast that with Kamala Harris’s podcast play.

Her October 6, 2024, spot on Call Her Daddy with Alex Cooper was tighter, clocking under an hour.

Aimed at young women—70% of its 5 million weekly listeners are female, 76% under 35—Harris stuck to abortion rights: “Trump says he’ll protect women? He’s taking away our choices.” Cooper kept it friendly, asking about Trump’s “protector” line, but it lacked the freewheeling chaos of Trump’s outings.

Harris’s team later eyed Rogan’s show, but scheduling tanked it—Trump nabbed the slot.

Her aide Stephanie Cutter lamented on Pod Save America, “We had one day, and Trump took it. Rogan wouldn’t travel.” That missed chance stung; Rogan’s young, male-heavy audience was one Harris struggled to crack.

Trump’s podcast run wasn’t just Rogan.

On This Past Weekend with Theo Von, he spun folksy tales—like sipping a Coke with a Civil War buff: “Great guy, knew every battle, I said, ‘You should’ve been there!’” The clip of him joking about drug rumors hit 14 million YouTube views.

On Impaulsive with Logan Paul in June 2024, post-conviction, Trump grinned: “They convicted me, and donations went through the roof—people love a fighter!”

Paul, a former prankster with a Gen-Z fanbase, lobbed softballs, letting Trump’s charisma shine. Each stop reinforced his fast-food vibe: quick, familiar, satisfying.

The evolution of political communication

Historically, political communication was a deliberate and structured affair.

Leaders like Franklin D. Roosevelt used radio “fireside chats” to connect with Americans during the Great Depression, offering reassurance through carefully scripted addresses. 

John F. Kennedy’s televised debates with Richard Nixon in 1960 underscored the power of visual media, blending substance with charisma.

These moments were orchestrated, with every word weighed for impact and every gesture rehearsed. 

Even as recently as the early 2000s, press releases and formal speeches dominated the political sphere, serving as the primary conduits for policy announcements and public engagement.

The advent of the internet and social media, however, shattered this paradigm.

Platforms like X, YouTube, and TikTok have democratized communication, enabling politicians to bypass traditional gatekeepers—journalists, editors, and newsrooms—and speak directly to constituents. 

This shift has accelerated the demand for brevity and immediacy.

According to a 2023 study by the Pew Research Center, the average American adult’s attention span for digital content has dwindled to just eight seconds—shorter than that of a goldfish. 

In this environment, the verbose, policy-heavy discourse of yesteryear struggles to compete with the visceral, bite-sized messaging that dominates today’s feeds.

Trump: the maestro of modern messaging?

No figure embodies this transformation more than Donald Trump.

His return to the White House in 2025, following his victory as the 47th President, reaffirms his unparalleled ability to harness communication as a political tool.

Unlike his predecessors, Trump eschews the filter of conventional media and the polish of prepared remarks. 

His approach is raw, spontaneous, and often polarising—a style that political strategist Frank Luntz describes as “a masterclass in cutting through the noise.”

Luntz, who has advised Republican campaigns for decades, notes,

Trump understands that people don’t want a lecture; they want a conversation. He talks like they talk—at the bar, on the couch, unscripted and real.

Trump’s communication strategy hinges on three pillars: speed, simplicity, and emotional resonance.

During his 2024 campaign, he frequently took to X to deliver succinct, punchy statements—often in under 280 characters—that bypassed traditional news cycles. 

For instance, when Bitcoin surpassed $100,000 in December 2024, Trump posted, “Crypto’s back, baby—America wins again!”

The message, delivered in less than 15 seconds of reading time, sparked a frenzy among supporters and investors alike, illustrating his knack for capitalizing on cultural moments.

This immediacy aligns with what media scholar Marshall McLuhan predicted decades ago: “The medium is the message.”

 For Trump, the medium is the unfiltered now, and the message is whatever stirs the crowd.

Contrast this with the Biden administration’s approach, which leaned heavily on detailed policy briefings and formal addresses.

While substantive, these efforts often failed to penetrate the public’s consciousness in the same visceral way. 

As cognitive psychologist Dr. Daniel Kahneman, Nobel laureate and author of Thinking, Fast and Slow, explains,

Humans are wired for System 1 thinking—quick, emotional, intuitive. Trump taps into that instinctively. He doesn’t ask voters to analyze; he asks them to feel.

The McDonald’s metaphor: fast, familiar, and filling

Trump’s communication mirrors the fast-food model: it’s quick, familiar, and satisfying to its audience.

The general voter, inundated with information from countless sources, has little patience for the intricacies of a Michelin-star policy proposal.

“Give it to me in less than a minute,” they demand, “because that’s all the attention span I have.” Trump delivers. 

His rallies, often live streamed on platforms like Rumble and X Spaces, resemble stand-up comedy more than traditional stump speeches—replete with nicknames (e.g., “Sleepy Joe,” “Crooked Hillary”), exaggerated gestures, and off-the-cuff remarks that ignite cheers or outrage.

Communications expert Kathleen Hall Jamieson, director of the Annenberg Public Policy Center, observes,

Trump’s rhetoric is the political equivalent of a Big Mac and fries. It’s not gourmet, but it’s what people crave—something instant, bold, and memorable. 

Jamieson points to Trump’s 2025 inauguration speech, a 19-minute address that eschewed lofty ideals for punchy promises like “We’re bringing jobs back, fast!”

Delivered in a conversational tone, it clocked in at half the length of Barack Obama’s 2009 address, yet its soundbites dominated social media for days.

This fast-food analogy isn’t just stylistic—it’s strategic.

Political consultant Roger Stone, a longtime Trump ally, argues,

The average American isn’t sitting down with a white paper on tax reform. They’re scrolling X while eating lunch. Trump gets that. He’s the McDonald’s drive-thru of politics—fast service, no frills, and you’re back on the road.

Stone’s insight underscores a broader truth: in an age where TikTok videos under 60 seconds can amass millions of views, brevity is power.

The experts weigh in: why communication trumps policy

To understand why this shift matters, consider the perspectives of leading voices in political science, psychology, and media studies.

Dr. Doris Graber, a pioneer in political communication research, argued before her passing in 2018 that “effective leaders don’t just inform—they persuade and mobilize.” Trump’s approach validates her thesis. 

His 2025 executive orders—slashing regulations and boosting domestic energy production—were announced not through dense policy papers but via a 45-second X video: “Day One: We’re drilling, building, winning. Done!”

The clip garnered 12 million views in 24 hours, dwarfing the reach of any White House press release.

Dr. Jonathan Haidt, a social psychologist and author of The Righteous Mind, offers a deeper lens:

Trump’s communication exploits moral foundations—loyalty, authority, sanctity—that resonate with his base. He’s not selling a tax plan; he’s selling a worldview.

Haidt points to Trump’s frequent use of phrases like “America First” or “They’re laughing at us,” which trigger visceral reactions rather than intellectual debate.

This emotional shorthand cuts through the clutter of modern media, where nuanced arguments often drown.

Yet, not all experts laud Trump’s style. Veteran journalist Carl Bernstein, famed for his Watergate reporting, warns of its dangers:

Trump’s impulsiveness sacrifices accuracy for impact. He’s a carnival barker in a digital circus—entertaining, yes, but it erodes discourse.

Bernstein cites Trump’s off-the-cuff claim during a 2024 rally that “Mexico’s sending invaders again,” which fueled online conspiracies despite lacking evidence.

For critics like Bernstein, the trade-off between speed and substance risks misinformation—a cost Trump seems willing to pay.

The global ripple effect

Trump’s influence extends beyond American borders, inspiring a wave of populist leaders who emulate his playbook.

In Brazil, Jair Bolsonaro’s brash social media presence echoes Trump’s, while Italy’s Giorgia Meloni uses short, fiery videos to rally her base. 

Dr. Pippa Norris, a comparative political scientist at Harvard, notes,

Trump has globalized the soundbite presidency. Leaders worldwide see that raw, rapid communication trumps polished diplomacy in the attention economy.

Norris’s research suggests that this trend correlates with rising voter disengagement from traditional media, as citizens increasingly turn to platforms where personalities like Trump thrive.

The counterpoint: does substance still matter?

For all his communicative flair, Trump’s critics argue that governance demands more than catchy slogans.

Senator Elizabeth Warren, a vocal opponent, remarked in a 2025 CNN interview, “You can’t run a country on tweets and tantrums. People need results—healthcare, jobs, not just noise.” 

Warren’s point raises a valid question: can the art of communication sustain political power without tangible outcomes?

Trump’s supporters counter that his 2025 policy wins—reviving manufacturing and curbing inflation—prove he delivers, even if the packaging is unconventional.

Political theorist Francis Fukuyama offers a balanced view:

Trump’s strength is his immediacy, but longevity requires substance. Communication opens the door; results keep it open.

Fukuyama’s analysis suggests a symbiosis between style and delivery—a dynamic Trump navigates with mixed success, depending on one’s perspective.

Communication: an ancient art and its enduring power

At its core, communication is as old as human society itself—an art refined over millennia, from tribal storytelling to Roman oratory.

Donald Trump has not invented it anew but adapted it to the digital age with uncanny precision. 

His impulsive, unfiltered style—delivered in less than a minute, like a McDonald’s order—reflects a broader cultural shift toward speed and simplicity.

As experts like Luntz, Kahneman, and Jamieson affirm, this tactic taps into human psychology and the realities of modern media, making it the most vital tool in today’s political arsenal.

Whether one admires or reviles him, Trump’s legacy as a communicator is undeniable.

He has stripped away the veneer of formality, proving that in an era of fleeting attention spans, the message that sticks is the one that’s fast, loud, and felt.

As the world watches his second term unfold in 2025, the lesson is clear: in modern politics, the art of communication isn’t just a tactic—it’s the battlefield itself.

The post Explained: why Trump’s fast-food messaging succeeds in today’s attention economy appeared first on Invezz

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