ICE ads are streaming near you. So is the online rebellion
There you are, sitting in traffic in your car, listening to Taylor Swift on Spotify because itβs easier than subjecting yourself to a new, more challenging artist. An ad pops up in your stream. Itβs serious stuff, evidenced by the dystopian tone of the narrator: βJoin the mission to protect America,β the serious manβs voice commands, βwith bonuses up to $50,000 and generous benefits. Apply now β¦ and fulfill your mission.β
Itβs an Immigration and Customs Enforcement recruitment ad, part of the Trump administrationβs investment of $30 billion to add more than 10,000 deportation officers to its ranks by the end of the year. You would have been spared the outrage if only you had paid for Spotifyβs ad-free tier of service, but thereβs no way the audio streamer is getting your money now. Youβll be switching to, say, Apple Music. Maybe Tidal?
The experience of being subjected to recruitment ads for a domestic military force, assembled by a power-hungry president, has generated intense backlash thatβs culminated this week in calls for boycotts of streaming services and platforms that have featured ICE spots. They include Pandora, ESPN, YouTube, Hulu and Fubo TV. Multiple HBO Max subscribers bemoaned on X that they were subjected to ICE recruitment videos while watching All Elite Wrestling: βTime to be force-fed ICE commercials against my will for two hours again #WWENXT,β @YKWrestling wrote.
Recruitment ads β Uncle Samβs βI Want Youβ poster comes to mind β are an American staple, especially in times of war. But the current recruitment effort is aimed at sending forces into American cities, predicated on exaggerated claims that U.S. metro areas are under siege and in peril due to dangerous illegal immigrants, leftist protesters and out-of-control crime rates. The data, however, does not support those claims. The American Immigration Council found that from 1980 to 2022, while the immigrant share of the U.S. population more than doubled (from 6.2% to 13.9%), the total crime rate declined by over 60%.
Yet thereβs a far scarier doomscape on the horizon if ICEβs recruitment efforts are successful: a mercenary army loyal only to Trump, weaponized to keep him on the throne. If that sounds more dystopian than the aforementioned Spotify ad, consider that the administration has spent more than $6.5 million over the past month on a slew of 30-second commercials aimed at luring in police officers.
The ads aired on TVs in more than a dozen cities including Chicago, Seattle and Atlanta and opened with images of each specific metro areaβs skyline. Then came the commanding narration: βAttention, Miami law enforcement!β Itβs followed by the same messaging that is used in ICE ads across the country: βYou took an oath to protect and serve, to keep your family, your city, safe. But in sanctuary cities youβre ordered to stand down while dangerous illegals walk free β Join ICE and help us catch the worst of the worst. Drug traffickers. Gang members. Predators.β
But are the ads working? Itβs hard to say since transparency isnβt a hallmark of the MAGA White House. For what itβs worth, a Sept. 16 press release from the DHS claimed that it had received more than 150,000 applications in response to its campaign and had extended 18,000 tentative job offers.
As for the power of consumer-led boycotts, thereβs hope. More than 1.7 million Disney, Hulu and ESPN subscriptions were reportedly canceled between Sept. 17 and Sept. 23 during Jimmy Kimmelβs temporary suspension by ABC (Disney is ABCβs parent company). The network pulled the show after the hostβs comments related to Charlie Kirkβs assassination angered MAGA supporters and the Trump-appointed FCC chair appeared to threaten the network. But after a week with a significant increase in cancellations β a 436% jump compared to a normal week β Kimmel was back on the air.
As of today, Spotify appears unmoved by the pressure to pull those intrusive ICE ads. βThis advertisement is part of a broad campaign the US government is running across television, streaming, and online channels,β a Spotify spokesperson said in a statement this week. βThe content does not violate our advertising policies. However, users can mark any ad with a thumbs up or thumbs down to help manage their ads preferences.β
Thumbs down. Frowny emoji. Cue the dystopian narrator for a counter ad: βJoin the mission to protect America: Cancel Spotify.β