Modern Propaganda: From Documentaries to TikTok

Today, the same persuasive techniques condense into seconds on TikTok, X, and YouTube: jump cuts, captions, and AI voiceovers replace the documentary’s narration. A swipe now achieves what once required a production budget and television airtime, turning reputational battles into an interactive game. Both “Stolen Honor” and today’s viral “call-out” videos rely on the same emotional structure—an accusation framed as a revelation. In “Stolen Honor,” serious interviews and a steady documentary pace establish credibility; online, quick edits, dramatic soundtracks, and on-screen text emphasize urgency and moral certainty to achieve the same effect. The scale and authorship differ: the earlier film depended on coordinated distribution and broadcast authority, while today’s creators generate similar reputational harm through repetition, remixing, and algorithmic boost.

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