Assignment:
Digital propaganda, popular culture, and the 2026 U.S.-Israel-Iran conflict
For this assignment, you will analyze two short LEGO-style political videos as primary sources.
This means you are not treating them as neutral news reports or as factual evidence of what happened. You are treating them as artifacts of political communication: evidence of how someone wanted audiences to feel, think, laugh, blame, sympathize, or share.
The two videos are:
"We Love Americans - But Not Their Leaders | New LEGO Video from IRAN" - publicly listed on YouTube under Sophmara/Sophmara and BNN metadata.
"New LEGO Video from IRAN | LOSERS FIRST!" - publicly listed on YouTube; one archived description identifies a copy as an AI-generated satirical propaganda video associated with Explosive Media.
Recent reporting has described these Iranian LEGO-style videos as part of a broader AI-generated, pro-Iran media campaign that uses humor, music, toy aesthetics, and viral editing to attack U.S. and Israeli political narratives. Some reports note that such videos have been shared by Iranian-government accounts, while creators or representatives have also claimed independence, so students should be careful to distinguish visible uploader, creator, state-linked amplification, and direct government production or approval.
Required Submission:
Submit a 500-900 word response that includes:
A short introduction identifying both videos as primary sources.
A source analysis: creator/uploader, platform, intended audience.
A propaganda-effectiveness analysis.
A comparison of both videos' style, message, and strategy.
At least three timestamped examples from the videos.
A brief conclusion answering: Which video is more effective as wartime propaganda, and why? Need Assignment Help?
Guiding Question:
If these videos were treated as propaganda pieces aligned with or approved by the Iranian government during the 2026 conflict between the U.S., Israel, and Iran, how effective would they be? What are the creators trying to achieve, and why might this style work better online than a formal speech, press release, or traditional news segment?
Part I: Primary Source Analysis
For each video, answer the following:
1. Who is the creator or visible source?
Identify the visible uploader, title, platform, language, style, and any available public information about the source. Do not simply write "Iran made this." Instead, ask:
Who uploaded it?
Who appears to be the intended speaker?
Is this an official government message, a state-linked message, a repost, a fan upload, or an independent pro-Iran production?
What evidence do you have?
2. Who is the intended audience?
Consider multiple audiences:
Americans critical of their own government
Iranians
anti-war viewers internationally
young social media users
supporters of Iran
critics of Israel and U.S. foreign policy
people who may not normally follow international law or foreign policy debates
Explain which audience seems most important and why.
3. How is the story presented?
Look closely at narrative, image, music, pacing, humor, emotional language, and visual symbols. Consider:
Who is portrayed as innocent?
Who is portrayed as guilty?
Who is mocked?
Who is humanized?
What emotions does the video try to produce: anger, sympathy, pride, amusement, shame, revenge, solidarity?
Why use LEGO-style animation rather than real footage?
Part II: The Meaning of "We Love Americans"
Pay special attention to the phrase "We Love Americans - But Not Their Leaders."
Analyze this as a propaganda strategy. Your answer should consider how the phrase separates ordinary people from political leadership. What does this allow the video to do?
Possible points to consider:
It avoids sounding anti-American while still attacking U.S. policy.
It invites American viewers to identify with the message rather than reject it.
It frames Americans and Iranians as both victims of political elites.
It shifts blame from "the American people" to leaders, militaries, corporations, media systems, or foreign-policy institutions.
It may appeal to anti-war, populist, or anti-establishment sentiment inside the United States.
It creates a softer emotional tone than direct threats or military triumphalism.
In other words, the phrase is not just sentimental. It is a rhetorical device.
Part III: Treating the Videos as Propaganda
For this section, use the following working definition:
Propaganda is political communication designed to shape perception, emotion, loyalty, or behavior, often by simplifying complex events into a persuasive story.
Now answer:
If these videos are propaganda, are they effective?
Do not answer only "yes" or "no." Define effective for what purpose.
Possible goals include:
weakening trust in U.S. and Israeli leadership
presenting Iran as morally wronged or misunderstood
making Iranian messaging look creative, youthful, and technologically sophisticated
appealing directly to Americans over the heads of their leaders
turning war into shareable social media content
using humor to make a political message less defensive and more viral
embarrassing specific political figures
reframing military conflict as a struggle over narrative, legitimacy, and public opinion
Also consider possible weaknesses:
Does the LEGO style trivialize suffering?
Does satire reduce moral seriousness?
Could American viewers see it as manipulative?
Does the message rely too heavily on caricature?
Does propaganda become less or more persuasive when it is too obvious?
Part IV: Compare the Two Videos
Write a comparative analysis of the two videos.
Similarities
Consider how both videos may use:
LEGO-style or toy-like animation
AI-generated visuals or music
satire and exaggeration
simplified heroes and villains
anti-U.S. or anti-Israeli leadership messaging
internet humor instead of formal diplomacy
emotional appeals to ordinary people
viral aesthetics designed for short attention spans
Differences
Consider how the tone and goal may differ:
"We Love Americans - But Not Their Leaders"appears more conciliatory and emotional. It tries to build sympathy with ordinary Americans and separate people from government power.
"LOSERS FIRST!" appears more openly mocking and confrontational. It works more like a diss track, victory chant, or humiliation video aimed at ridiculing U.S. leadership and projecting Iranian confidence.
Your comparison should explain which style is more persuasive, for which audience, and why.