[00:00] Lila Grant: Welcome to Buzz, your daily dose of everything trending. [00:04] Lila Grant: I am Lila Grant. [00:06] Jonah Klein: And I'm Jonah Klein. [00:07] Jonah Klein: We're breaking down the stories that are taking over your feed today. [00:11] Jonah Klein: And honestly, this first one is pretty heavy. [00:14] Lila Grant: It really is, Jonah. [00:16] Lila Grant: If you've been on Axe or TikTok in the last few hours, [00:20] Lila Grant: you've likely seen the footage of Representative Eh Ilhan Omar. [00:25] Lila Grant: She was at a campaign event in Minneapolis [00:27] Lila Grant: when someone threw a liquid at her. [00:30] Lila Grant: It's one of those moments that instantly becomes a digital lightning rod. [00:34] Jonah Klein: Exactly. The video itself is raw. It's filmed from the crowd, shaky, and captures that split second of confusion. [00:43] Jonah Klein: It's exactly the kind of content that the TikTok algorithm loves because it feels unfiltered, even though the implications are incredibly serious. [00:52] Lila Grant: And the speed at which it spread was wild. Within minutes, Ilhan Omar was trending globally. [01:00] Lila Grant: People were scrubbing the footage frame by frame, trying to identify the liquid, the person who threw it, and the security response. [01:09] Lila Grant: It's like the Internet turns into a collective forensics lab whenever a high-profile incident like this happens. [01:15] Jonah Klein: It's that citizen journalism edge, Lila, but it often comes with a side of massive speculation. [01:22] Jonah Klein: I saw some threads claiming it was just water, others saying it was something more harmful. [01:28] Jonah Klein: Before the facts are even out, the narrative is already being written by whoever can get the most engagement on their post. [01:35] Lila Grant: That's the core of it. [01:37] Lila Grant: The visual is so visceral that it bypasses the need for context for a lot of people. [01:43] Lila Grant: It's just click-click. [01:44] Lila Grant: Share, React. [01:46] Jonah Klein: Which leads us to how the different platforms [01:49] Jonah Klein: are actually reacting to this. [01:51] Jonah Klein: The polarization is, frankly, off the charts. [01:54] Lila Grant: Oh, tell me about it. [01:57] Lila Grant: On one side, you have the expected condemnation, people pointing out that no matter your politics, [02:04] Lila Grant: physical attacks on public officials are a line that shouldn't be crossed. [02:08] Lila Grant: But then, Jonah, the darker side of internet culture creeps in. [02:13] Jonah Klein: Right. [02:14] Jonah Klein: The memification of political violence. [02:17] Jonah Klein: I've seen some accounts trying to turn the moment into a reaction gif or using it to fuel existing anti-Omar rhetoric. [02:26] Jonah Klein: It's this weird digital detachment where people forget there's a real human being on the other side of that screen. [02:33] Lila Grant: Jonah, I noticed that on X specifically, the community notes have been working overtime. [02:41] Lila Grant: They're trying to debunk some of the more extreme claims about what happened right after the video ends. [02:47] Lila Grant: It's a constant battle between the viral hot take and the actual reality of the situation. [02:53] Jonah Klein: It's a losing battle sometimes. [02:56] Jonah Klein: TikTok is seeing a lot of POV videos, people talking over the clip, giving their raw reaction, which just keeps the footage in the cycle longer. [03:05] Jonah Klein: It creates this echo chamber where the shock factor is the only thing that matters. [03:10] Lila Grant: And we have to talk about what this means for the future of public events. [03:16] Lila Grant: We're seeing like more and more of these liquid attacks or milkshaking incidents becoming [03:22] Lila Grant: viral stunts. [03:24] Lila Grant: Is the Internet in crisis? [03:25] Lila Grant: encouraging this behavior, Jonah? [03:27] Jonah Klein: I think there's a strong argument for that, Leela. [03:30] Jonah Klein: When you know that throwing something at a politician will get you millions of views and [03:35] Jonah Klein: potentially turn you into a hero for your specific digital subculture, the incentive structure [03:41] Jonah Klein: is, I mean, it's completely broken. [03:43] Lila Grant: It turns a serious breach of security into a piece of content. [03:49] Lila Grant: We saw it with the eggings a few years ago, and now it's escalating. [03:54] Lila Grant: The conversation on social media is shifting from this is a security failure to this is a viral moment. [04:02] Jonah Klein: And that shift is dangerous. [04:04] Jonah Klein: It desensitizes the audience. When we view political life through the lens of a 15-second TikTok, [04:11] Jonah Klein: we lose the gravity of the situation. Security experts are already sounding the alarm on how [04:18] Jonah Klein: these low-level attacks can proceed more serious ones. [04:22] Lila Grant: Definitely. It's a reminder that what happens on our screens has very real, very [04:28] Lila Grant: physical consequences. We'll be keeping an eye on how the platforms handle the spread of this footage [04:34] Jonah Klein: and if any policy changes come from it. For sure. It's a complex mess of free speech, [04:41] Jonah Klein: public safety, and the sheer velocity of the internet. [04:44] Jonah Klein: But for now, that's what's buzzing. [04:47] Lila Grant: Social media coverage with bright, playful energy. [04:51] Lila Grant: I'm Leela Grant. [04:52] Lila Grant: Thanks for hanging with us. [04:54] Lila Grant: I'm Leela Grant. [04:55] Jonah Klein: And I'm Jonah Klein. [04:57] Jonah Klein: We'll catch you tomorrow for another roundup of the digital world. [05:01] Jonah Klein: Stay safe out there. [05:02] Lila Grant: This has been Buzz. [05:04] Lila Grant: Neural Newscast is AI-assisted, human-reviewed. [05:08] Lila Grant: View our AI transparency policy at neuralnewscast.com. [05:13] Lila Grant: Find more at buzz.neuralnewscast.com.