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Spotify, Max, Streaming Services Face Backlash for Anti-Immigrant Ads
Music

Spotify, Max, Streaming Services Face Backlash for Anti-Immigrant Ads

by jummy84 November 12, 2025
written by jummy84

If a dystopic voice asking you “to fulfill your mission” of rounding up undocumented immigrants has snuck its way onto your streaming airwaves, you’re far from the only one.

In the last two months, online users have reported seeing and hearing an increased amount of recruitment advertising from the Department of Homeland Security on streaming services such as Pandora, Spotify, and Max — and even during September’s MTV VMAs.

The new advertising push, which has faced online backlash, has followed the Trump administration’s investment of $30 billion to hire at least 10,000 more deportation officers by the end of the year, according to The Associated Press. “You took an oath to protect and serve, to keep your family, your city, safe,” the narrator says in some advertisements targeting local police officers. “But in sanctuary cities, you’re ordered to stand down while dangerous illegals walk free.”

In mid-October, specifically, music listeners on Spotify’s ad-supported free plan reported hearing similar advertising on the platform, with some choosing to end their membership due to the ads. When reached for comment, a rep for Spotify told Rolling Stone that the DHS commercials were part of a “broad campaign” from the government agency and that it did not violate any advertising policies on the platform.

But the recruitment ads have been running on numerous streaming platforms, with fans flagging concerns with the ads on Hulu, Max, YouTube, and Pandora, as early as April.

According to new data from Equis acquired by Rolling Stone, DHS spent a combined $2.8 million on English and Spanish-language ads on Meta’s Facebook and Instagram since March 1, and another half a million on ICE recruitment ads on the platform since August.

On Google and YouTube, DHS spent nearly $3 million on specifically Spanish-language advertising aimed at promoting self-deportation. While Equis is unable to track data for ad spends on Spotify, Pandora, and other platforms, an industry source told Rolling Stone that Spotify had received a mere $74,000 from DHS to run their advertisements. That figure represents less than three percent of what the government spent on Google and Meta.

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The new data shared on Nov. 11 follows advertisement tracking information from Equis and Priorities USA that confirmed that the Trump administration had spent upwards of $10 million on ad spending for DHS and ICE.

“We’re seeing that some of these campaigns have actively started during October, clearly after the shutdown started, which is key to this story,” Natalia Campos Vargas, the deputy research director for messaging at Equis, told Rolling Stone last week. “During the government shutdown, where employees are being furloughed, these government entities are still spending millions of dollars on advertising on TV and digital platforms.”

According to the memo, the government even increased ad spending during the shutdown. Specifically, DHS increased spending on YouTube ads, going up from $292,000 alone in September to $332,000 in just the first three weeks of October.

In a statement to Rolling Stone on Nov. 2, DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin confirmed that the funding came from this bill, and that “hiring law enforcement officers is mission critical in order to fix the crisis the Biden administration manufactured by letting millions of criminal illegal aliens come into the country… Nothing will slow us down from recruiting more officers.”

In a public Pandora community thread started in May 2025, a user who said they have been a Pandora user for more than 15 years shared that they were canceling their subscription due to an “overwhelming number” of DHS ads. The thread has received repeated comments from more users sharing their frustration with receiving similar advertisements.

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“This is not a random glitch. It is the result of ad targeting that equates music preference with immigration status,” read the user’s note. “Your platform appears to be allowing (or enabling) ads that racially and culturally profile users based on the language of the music they enjoy.”

In August, DHS confirmed to The Independent that it would be running advertisements on YouTube, Max, Amazon Prime Video, X, LinkedIn, and other internet platforms. Several Reddit threads discussed folks opting for VPNs to stream without receiving the ads, while others opted to cancel their subscriptions completely. “It isn’t just the fact that they’re advertising, it is how AWFUL the ads actually are,” wrote one user. “Forget the hateful bullshit, just the sheer stupidity of running that ad in Denver is fucking WILD,” added another.

Similarly, Spanish-language channels such as Univision and Telemundo have also run ads featuring Kristi Noem urging “illegal aliens” not to come into the country. “Join the mission to protect America with bonuses up to $50,000 and generous benefits. Apply now join.ice.gov and fulfill your mission,” says one ad.

When reached for comment, DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin told Rolling Stone that there was “nothing offensive or partisan” with removing what it called criminals from the United States. “The ICE recruitment campaign is a resounding success with more than 150,000 applications rolling in from patriotic Americans answering the call to defend the Homeland by helping arrest and remove the worst of the worst from our country,” McLaughlin said.

Earlier this month, the AP reported that ad-spends by DHS had topped $6.5 million, and that spots had been run in several major cities, including Seattle, Chicago, Washington, D.C, and Miami, aimed at recruiting local officers frustrated with their cities’ immigration enforcement policies.

HBO, Pandora, and Hulu did not immediately respond to Rolling Stone’s request for comment. YouTube had no comment.

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This story was updated on Nov. 11 at 6 p.m. ET to include new data on the ad spending made by DHS and ICE on Spotify, Meta, and Google.

November 12, 2025 0 comments
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No Kings Organizers Call for Spotify Boycott Over ICE Ads
Music

No Kings Organizers Call for Spotify Boycott Over ICE Ads

by jummy84 October 31, 2025
written by jummy84

Non-profit organization Indivisible Project, one of the organizers behind the No Kings protests, has called for a Spotify boycott in response to the music streamer running ICE recruitment ads on its platform.

In a blog post titled “Don’t Stream Fascism,” Indivisible wrote, “Spotify is running ads recruiting agents for ICE, the federal agency charged with mass deportation and surveillance of immigrant communities. These ads target vulnerable populations, promise signing bonuses, and normalize fear and intimidation in our neighborhoods.”

The boycott urges Spotify founder and CEO Daniel Ek, along with incoming co-CEOs Gustav Söderström and Alex Norström, to immediately “terminate all ICE and DHS advertising contracts,” update its advertising policy to “prohibit government propaganda and hate-based recruitment campaigns,” and commit to “defending civil rights and standing up for communities under threat from authoritarian actions.”

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Until then, Indivisible is calling on listeners and artists to cancel their Spotify subscriptions, peacefully protest outside the company’s offices, studios, or major events, and urge artists, podcasters, and labels to publicly denounce the ads.

Earlier this month, Spotify said it would continue running the ICE ads as part of the US government’s broad television, streaming, and online campaign, reasoning that the content did not violate advertising policies. Similar advertising has appeared on YouTube, HBO Max, and Hulu in recent months.

Spotify had already faced boycotts after reports that Ek has a financial stake in the AI defense company Helsing. Artists who have pulled their catalogs include Massive Attack, King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard, and Deerhoof.

October 31, 2025 0 comments
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bitchy | California bans loud ads on streaming platforms, to go into effect next July
Celebrity News

bitchy | California bans loud ads on streaming platforms, to go into effect next July

by jummy84 October 15, 2025
written by jummy84


My mother will never give up cable and switch to streaming-only, because of her deep and abiding love of fast-forwarding through commercials on shows she’s recorded on her DVR. It’s her remote-wielding right and she will not relinquish it! I, on the other hand, have been streaming-only for years, and for most platforms I subscribe to the (microscopically) cheaper ad-included plans. This is how I know far too many pharmaceutical and insurance jingles than any one human should be subjected to. I know many of you know this pain as well. Have you also noticed that a lot of the time, the ads are glaringly LOUDER than whatever program you’re actually trying to watch? Well Californians sure noticed it, which led to Golden State legislators recently passing a law that bans commercials from being louder than the movie/TV show being streamed:

Gov. Gavin Newsom signed the bill, SB 576, that had been shepherded by Sen. Thomas Umberg (D-Santa Ana) through the legislative process. It had passed unanimously on the Senate and Assembly floor earlier this month in Sacramento.

The passage means that, starting on July 1 of next year, major streaming services won’t be able to “transmit the audio of commercial advertisements louder than the video content the advertisements accompany,” the bill’s text reads.

The law asks streaming services to follow the Federal Communications Commission’s Commercial Advertisement Loudness Mitigation (CALM) Act, which went in to effect in 2012 for linear TV and radio but does not currently apply to streamers. That effort was spurred by the FCC receiving more than 130,000 complaints in 2010, “the vast majority of which concerned the excessively loud sound of commercials,” the state’s Assembly analysis recounted.

“Many platforms have introduced tiered subscription models that require consumers to pay a premium to avoid commercials, bringing ad-supported viewing, and the loudness of those ads, back into focus for millions of users,” the Assembly briefing noted. Indeed, price hikes across the board from streaming services have by default pushed consumers to the cheaper options, which now include regular commercial breaks just like old school TV.

A bill analysis by Senate Legislature committee staff noted that the Motion Picture Association, which lobbies on behalf of Disney, Netflix, Paramount, Amazon MGM Studios, Sony, Universal and Warner Bros. Discovery, had voiced opposition to the effort.

“The Motion Picture Association says that since streaming services are working voluntarily to address the issue of loud advertisements, SB 576 is unnecessary,” the analysis read. “They note that many streaming services have undertaken reasonable efforts to adjust the loudness of advertisements that come from server-side ad insertion that may be inconsistent with the loudness of the programs.”

Newsom, on signing the bill on Oct. 6, touted its volume-lowering impact, saying, “We heard Californians loud and clear, and what’s clear is that they don’t want commercials at a volume any louder than the level at which they were previously enjoying a program.”

[From The Hollywood Reporter]

I’d like to take this opportunity to commend the lawmakers who make the time and effort to name their policies in such a way that there’s a clever resulting acronym. Case in point: the Commercial Advertisement Loudness Mitigation Act, or CALM. It’s all in the details! And speaking of, those few at the top making fortunes off streaming are such sneaky f–ks, ignoring the CALM Act because it didn’t explicitly refer to streaming (even though it was a logical extension). It’s the same playbook for how these Scrooges have been cheating actors out of streaming residuals. Anyway, good on California, and I hope the movement spreads east! What I find annoying is not just how loud commercials are overall, but how a lot of the time now it’s contrasted with TV/movies that are increasingly hard to hear! (Or do I need to make an appointment with my ENT?) There’s a whole slew of entertainment that is mumbling verging on inarticulate in audible dialogue levels, to the point where a lot of the time I wear my air pods when watching TV so that the sound goes directly into my head! I know it makes me sound (noise pun!) like an old fogey, I can live with that.

Photos credit: Janet Mayer/INSTARimages.com, Netflix, Disney press

October 15, 2025 0 comments
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Sydney Sweeney 'Great Jeans' Ads Lifted Sales
TV & Streaming

Sydney Sweeney ‘Great Jeans’ Ads Lifted Sales

by jummy84 September 3, 2025
written by jummy84

Clothing retailer American Eagle is thrilled with the results of its “Sydney Sweeney has great jeans” marketing campaign — which became part of the national political conversation — and says it’s planning to do more with the actor later this year.

The company said Sweeney’s jean collaboration sold out within a week with some items selling out within a day. Sweeney “is a winner, and in just six weeks, the campaign has generated unprecedented new customer acquisition,” CMO Craig Brommers told analysts on the earnings call.

In after-hours trading Wednesday, American Eagle stock was up nearly 25%.

However, while the company beat Wall Street expectations for the second quarter ended Aug. 2, 2025, American Eagle’s total net revenue of $1.28 billion for the period was down 1% compared with last year and total comparable sales also decreased 1%. Operating profit was $103 million, an increase of 2% versus the year-earlier period, while diluted earnings per share came in at 45 cents, up 15%.

In another celeb tie-up, American Eagle teamed with Travis Kelce — announcing a new design collaboration with the Kansas City Chief star’s sports and lifestyle brand Tru Kolors, one day after his engagement to Taylor Swift became public.

American Eagle CEO Jay Schottenstein said in prepared remarks with the earnings release, “The fall season is off to a positive start. Fueled by stronger product offerings and the success of recent marketing campaigns with Sydney Sweeney and Travis Kelce, we have seen an uptick in customer awareness, engagement and comparable sales. We look forward to building on our progress and the continued strength of our iconic brands to drive higher profitability, long-term growth and shareholder value.”

According to American Eagle, the Sweeney and Kelce campaigns combined have generated 40 billion impressions to date.

American Eagle’s Sweeney ad campaign was meant to be a lighthearted play on words. In one of the ads, Sweeney says, “Genes are passed down from parents to offspring,” then turns to the camera and says, “My jeans are blue.” In another spot, she appears before a billboard that says, “Sydney Sweeney has great genes”; then, the billboard is shown with “genes” crossed out and replaced with “jeans.”

Some online commenters perceived a eugenicist subtext in the genes/jeans play on words — an alleged racist dog-whistle that glorifies her white heritage as a beauty ideal. Republicans pounced on the backlash as an opportunity to stir the pot.

President Donald Trump, in an Aug. 4 post on his Truth Social platform, wrote, “Sydney Sweeney, a registered Republican, has the HOTTEST ad out there. It’s for American Eagle, and the jeans are ‘flying of the shelves.’ Go get ‘em Sydney.” Trump added: “Being WOKE is for losers, being Republican is what you want to be.”

Earlier, Trump’s White House communications manager Steven Cheung called the controversy a prime example of “cancel culture run amok.” Meanwhile, Vice President JD Vance mocked liberals for creating a hysteria around the American Eagle campaign, saying on an episode of the “Ruthless” podcast: “My political advice to the Democrats is continue to tell everybody who thinks Sydney Sweeney is attractive is a Nazi. That appears to be their actual strategy.” However, no prominent Democratic officials have taken a stance on the Sweeney ads.

September 3, 2025 0 comments
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