Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
سپاه پاسداران انقلاب اسلامی
A growing ecosystem of Iranian digital creators has begun producing content that looks less like political messaging and more like native internet culture: animations, sharp rap tracks layered with Western cultural references, subtitled religious chants, and minimalist memes built on wordplay.
These are not analytical pieces. But they shape perception—often faster, and more effectively, than analysis ever could.
The impact of such content has not gone unnoticed. John Cooper, a former campaign manager for Barack Obama, reacted to the wave of Iranian Lego-style animations by saying:
“Damn, there are new videos coming out every day, and they just keep getting better and better. They’re effective, of course, because they contain a lot of truth about the Trump regime and its policies.”
Lego, Memes, and Rap: How Iran Is Rewriting the Rules of Digital Warfare - WANA
WANA (Apr 15) – While global attention remained fixed on the battlefield, a different kind of content was quietly taking over Western timelines: a few seconds of Lego-style animation, with no narrator, no complex subtitles—yet carrying a clear, digestible message. For casual viewers, it was...

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