In the chaos of President Trump's first 100 days, norms have been overthrown, tariffs have been collected, tariffs have been suspended, and court conflicts have been consistent. A reliable even number.
The expression of the administration and how important it is.
The cultivation of Trump's own image (suits and ties and hair and tan) is very merciless and has become all the abbreviations he represents. So, regarding the people around him, his Cabinet Secretary, his closest aides and family. Together, they convey the value system the President claims to represent, as strong as any executive order, and the promise he made his second term.
In an increasingly less mediated world of scrolls where photography was the first communication, and where the president is the executive producer of Everyone's reality show, costumes have become the center of messaging. They serve as accessories for executive orders that challenge the current situation, separation of power, and boundaries of legality. Of course, they are less important than such orders, but they are part of the pitch.
Trump's first 100 days are part of the administration's story that is essential to seeing a part plays a role. The meaning of gender is codified by clothing and hair (face or flowing clothing and hair), as well as by Fiat. Where the Secretary of Defense built a glam room at the Pentagon for a sale appearance. The Ukrainian president's refusal to file a lawsuit for his oval office becomes a public symbol of his refusal. The clothing is a coded sign of loyalty, and fealty is of unnegotiable quality and is perfect for the sleeves.
What does this administration represent? The behavior may be troubling, but its style is strategic. Just because a dress can sometimes look strangely close to Cosplay doesn't mean it's not effective either. Insinuation: Don't believe what you hear or read. Trust your eyes!
For example, when he says he supports America itself, trust Trump. After all, he was dressed in the colour of a flag rather than the actual flag.
His blue suit, white shirt and red tie became just as uniform as the actual uniforms, especially at the moment of major public stance, which many of his administration's male members adopted wholesale. JD Vance wore it for a Zelensky meeting in an oval office. Vance and House Speaker Mike Johnson wore it for their presidential speech to Congress. FBI Director Kash Patel wore it for a confirmation hearing.
That tacit patriotism is topped only by the explicit patriotism of Secretary of Defense Pete Hegses. He took the Washington practice of wearing flag lapel pins to new heights, like the pledge of fashion loyalty, by regularly wearing his bright blue blue suit and his bright blue blue suit.
However, the outfit display that the star spit out turned out to be a visit in a jumpsuit, the predecessor to Kidlock's oval office visit.
And that's just the beginning. Trump is also enriching America again. How do you know? He not only announces a new golden age, but he models it. As he posted about the truth social, “Those who have money make rules.”
It started with the first ball, and his family wore a bustling, covered gown that appears to have been chosen to remember the original golden age. It continued in a renovated oval office with gold damask chairs and curtains. Its mantle was covered with golden ur and walls, and was covered in oil with elaborate gold frames.
This perspective was formalized in the official portrait of Melania Trump. In this portrait, he was less than the board's executive chairman wearing a tuxedo. And he wore a $50,000 gold Rolex when Secretary of Homeland Security Christie Noem posed outside a prison in El Salvador. The watch was even brighter than the new billionaire golden visa that Trump displayed in early April, and the golden lapel pin in the form of the president's profile.
Or the crossing of gold worn by many women in the administrative sector reminds us that the administration is actually reverently reverently residing America. The cross will sparkle the necks of Attorney General Pam Bondy and White House Press Secretary Caroline Leavitt. They shine delicately in the throats of Brooke Rollins Agriculture Secretary and Labour Secretary Lori Chavez Deremer. They draw a picture of their broad belief in stroke, as if they were holding their clenched hands at the start of the meeting.
This effect is not possible to overlook, as it makes America safe and re-embedded into embedded gear as secretaries of various ministers pose for promotional photos on the field alongside subordinates.
For example, Noem, who pretends to be an ice agent with a bullet vest and a baseball cap, or Patel, who held a press conference at his FBI Windbreaker, will hold a press conference in Army fatigue. Vance and his wife, Usha, have chosen to choose Army Green for their visit to disaster zones in North Carolina and California, as well as Green Parkas, a military visit to US military bases in Greenland.
They all followed Trump's lead. Trump was shot for that brave mug. The photo of the UFC Agro Spirit in a suit has become his favorite pose. It was recreated in case he missed the first official portrait and his true social profile (where his face is painted with an American flag, in case he missed the message that he was fighting for his country. Just as his rebellious fist-raised pose after an attempted assassination in Butler, Pennsylvania, was immortalized in an oil painting hanging from the Grand Foyer of the White House.
And just as his vows to confuse his vows, he found its embodiment in Elon Musk, who literally confused the uniforms of Washington facilities, reflecting Trump's spirit in his Black Magazine hat, jeans, blazer and logo tee, his Blazer and Teeclad's Doge Akorite are the equivalent minis of Trump's equivalent minis.
Zelensky may have been stripped off by not wearing a suit in his oval office, but Musk was told that. After all, the fastest way to convince a world that sees you moving fast and breaking things is to dress up in the mode of people who invented the myth of moving fast and breaking things. When Argentine President Javier Mairay gave Musk a chainsaw at a conservative political action conference in February, it was more of a joke than a revelation: 100 days later, the props are attracting as much attention as consistent progress.
Slideshow: Doug Mills/The New York Times. Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images; Eric Lee/The New York Times. Haiyun Jang from the New York Times. Brian Snyder/Reuters; Reggin Mahoe/White House. Kenny Holston/The New York Times. Alex Brandon/AP. Get McNamee/Getty Images
First collage: Eric Lee/The New York Times. Pool photo by Ron Sachs. Kenny Holston/The New York Times. Andrew Harnik/Getty Images; Haiyun Jang from the New York Times. Alex Brandon/AP. Jim Watson/AFP – Getty Images. Pool photo by Sean Zau. Pool photos by Julien de Rosa
Second Collage: Kenny Holston/The New York Times. Wojtek Radwanski/AFP – Getty Images; Doug Mills/The New York Times; Andrew Harnik/Getty Images; Samuel Colm/Getty Images. Eric Lee/The New York Times.
Third Collage: Doug Mills/The New York Times. Pool photos by Alex Brandon-Pool. Eric Lee/The New York Times. Pool photo by Mandel Ngan; Regin Mahoe/White House
Force Collage: Mark Sieferbein/AP. Kent Nishimura/Reuters; Eric Lee/The New York Times. Leahmiris/Reuters; Kenny Holston/The New York Times. Marta Lavandier/AP. Craig Hudson/Reuters; Saul Loeb/AFP – Getty Images; Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP – Getty Images Images; Jim Watson/AFP – Getty Images. Anna Money Maker/Getty Images. Doug Mills/New York Times
Fifth collage: US Immigration Customs Enforcement Agency via Getty Images. Jr. Rod Lamkey/Apsaced Press; Pool photo by Jim Watson. Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images; Earn McNamee/Getty Images. Kenny Holston/The New York Times. White House; pool photos by Alex Brandon.
Sixth Collage: Eric Lee/The New York Times. Oliver Contreras/AFP – Getty Images; Eric Lee/The New York Times. Fox; Kevin Lamarck/Reuters; Doug Mills/The New York Times; Algola in the New York Times