Sabrina Carpenter and other musicians protest unauthorized use of their songs in political campaigns, highlighting legal gaps in copyright fair use and reputational risks for artists. Legislative reforms are needed to protect artist rights.
Grammy-winning artist Sabrina Carpenter dropped a financial grenade on the White House’s unauthorized use of her 2024 single "Juno" in a deportation raid video—a move she branded as "evil and disgusting" in a blistering public statement. The official White House X account paired her upbeat pop track with ICE enforcement footage, triggering a firestorm over copyright ethics. This isn’t just about licensing fees—it’s a reputational liability nightmare for artists dragged into political quagmires. Carpenter’s protest mirrors the growing trend of musicians safeguarding their IP against partisan co-option, a battle where creative control clashes with campaign fair use loopholes.
The administration fired back with a statement dripping in Carpenter’s own lyrics—name-dropping her Short n’ Sweet album while defending deportations as targeting violent criminals. A White House spokesperson turned her artistry into rhetorical ammunition, spotlighting how political operatives exploit musical capital without consent. This exchange underscores the toxic calculus of weaponizing pop culture: when campaign soundtracks become reputational hazards, artists face brand erosion that no royalty check can fix.
| Artist | Year | Song Used | Political Context |
|---|---|---|---|
| R.E.M. | 2015 | It's the End of the World | Trump campaign rallies |
| Olivia Rodrigo | 2025 | All-American B***h | DHS self-deportation campaign |
| Kenny Loggins | 2025 | Danger Zone | AI-generated "King Trump" video |
The Trump campaign's cavalier approach to music licensing reads like a case study in brand-jacking gone wild. When R.E.M.'s It's the End of the World as We Know It got drafted for 2016 rallies, bassist Mike Mills fired back with Wall Street-worthy precision: "This constitutes willful infringement, not political speech" (The Sydney Morning Herald). Fast-forward to Kenny Loggins' 2025 objection over AI-generated "King Trump" propaganda using Danger Zone—a textbook example of derivative work risks in the deepfake era (The Age). These aren't mere licensing squabbles; they're precedent-setting battles over artistic control in the political-industrial complex.
Rodrigo's All-American B**h* becoming the soundtrack for a self-deportation campaign is like watching a growth stock get shorted by activist investors—except here, the short-sellers are politicians. Her viral condemnation ("racist, hateful propaganda") mirrors the valuation damage artists face when their work gets weaponized (Brisbane Times). Legal eagles spot the loophole: while DMCA takedowns paralyze commercial infringers, political campaigns skate by on murky fair use interpretations. This creates asymmetric risk—artists bear the brand erosion while campaigns harvest the engagement upside.
TIMELINE OF ARTIST PROTESTS
| Artist | Song | Year | Political Context |
|---|---|---|---|
| R.E.M. | It's the End of the World... | 2015 | Campaign rallies |
| Beyoncé | Formation | 2018 | Midterm election ads |
| Neil Young | Rockin' in the Free World | 2020 | Convention soundtrack |
| Kenny Loggins | Danger Zone | 2025 | AI-generated protest video |
| Olivia Rodrigo | All-American B***h | 2025 | Self-deportation campaign |
The legal tightrope of fair use in political campaigns just got wobblier. When Sabrina Carpenter’s Juno soundtracked a White House deportation video sans permission, it exposed a gaping hole in copyright exceptions—campaigns aren’t news reporting, yet they’re exploiting the gray area. The Trump team’s promotional usage defense? A flimsy Band-Aid on a bullet wound, especially when artists like Carpenter call it "evil and disgusting" misappropriation. This isn’t rookie stuff; we’ve seen this playbook with R.E.M. and Neil Young. The ethical quagmire? Forcing artists into unauthorized endorsements—like Olivia Rodrigo’s track fueling what she dubbed "racist, hateful propaganda".
Political misuse isn’t just a legal headache—it’s a balance sheet crisis. Carpenter’s lyrics were twisted to label critics "stupid, or...slow", a PR nightmare that echoes Target’s Beyoncé merch dump after unauthorized rally usage. Kenny Loggins’ Danger Zone AI protest? A masterclass in damage control, calling out how such stunts "divide us". Bottom line: When politics hijacks art, sponsors bolt faster than a hedge fund during a rate hike.
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The White House’s deployment of Sabrina Carpenter’s Juno in ICE raid footage mirrors the brand hijacking risks seen in corporate trademark violations. Carpenter’s "evil and disgusting" rebuke—reminiscent of CEOs disavowing ESG misalignment—highlights how political synchronization creates involuntary endorsement liabilities. The administration’s retaliatory lyric citations compound reputational damage, akin to forced brand associations in hostile takeovers.
From Neil Young’s 2020 cease-and-desist to Olivia Rodrigo’s All-American B**h* protest, these disputes form a litigation trendline comparable to IP infringement waves in tech. Kenny Loggins’ AI-generated Danger Zone controversy further parallels deepfake trademark cases, exposing gaps in digital-era protections.
Copyright’s "fair use" gray area for campaigns resembles regulatory arbitrage in financial markets. The reputational fallout—quantifiable via Basel III-style risk matrices—demands opt-in consent protocols mirroring EU GDPR’s explicit permissions.
Need for Clearer Licensing Protocols
The Jackson Browne v. McCain precedent shows settlements remain the norm, lacking the standardized pricing grids of commercial sync licensing.
Potential Legislative Amendments
Three fixes could mirror SEC disclosure rules:
TABLE_NAME
<div data-table-slug="legal-precedents">| Case Name | Year | Ruling Outcome | Political Context |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jackson Browne v. McCain | 2008 | Settlement for unauthorized use | Presidential campaign ad |
| David Byrne v. Charlie Crist | 2009 | Injunction granted | Florida gubernatorial campaign |
| Neil Young v. Trump | 2020 | Cease-and-desist issued | Rally soundtrack |
| R.E.M. v. Trump | 2015 | Public denunciation | Campaign announcement |
| Survivor v. DeWine | 2022 | Licensing fee demanded | COVID-19 policy promotion |
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