Fight Night at the White House

Fight Night at the White House


White and Trump have been aligned for quite some time. In his interview with Remnick, White called the President “one of my very, very good friends,” and commended him as a “Day One fan” of the U.F.C., who played an instrumental role in legitimatizing the sport. (Trump began hosting U.F.C. fights at the Taj Mahal in Atlantic City in 2001, the same year that White came on as a part owner; the organization has since been sold to Ari Emanuel’s TKO Group Holdings.) Some reports have questioned this narrative, suggesting that the relationship between the two men turned truly cozy only after Trump became President, for purely transactional reasons. But, whatever the case, the association has been notable for long enough that when Trump announced last summer that, to commemorate America’s two-hundred-and-fiftieth anniversary, the U.F.C. would hold a fight card on the White House’s South Lawn, it shouldn’t have been much of a surprise.

It shouldn’t have been, and yet, I’ll admit, it was, and my astonishment intensified as the preparations for the UFC Freedom 250 event began. (Originally meant to take place on the Fourth of July, it was later pushed up to June 14th, to coincide with Trump’s eightieth birthday.) It started with the enormous stars-and-stripes-adorned structure called the Claw, all but dwarfing the White House, under which thousands of punters lucky enough to watch the card play out in the Octagon would convene. Then, on Friday night, there was a press conference at the Lincoln Memorial, where the fourteen fighters competing in the card’s seven fights shit-talked one another—with a remarkable unanimity of metaphor—under the watchful eye of Honest Abe and several crypto.com banners. (“I’m gonna take his lights out in the first round,” Ilia Topuria, the trim-bearded Georgian Spanish lightweight, said of his opponent. “I gotta put his lights out—that’s as simple as that,” the pink-haired, face-tatted American bantamweight Sean O’Malley said, of his foe.) This was followed by the official weigh-in for media outlets on Saturday morning, in which the American heavyweight Josh Hokit, who’s known for taking on a variety of clownish personas, spit up what looked like vomit all over his large chest-piece tattoo as he stepped onstage. (“So what, maybe I was drinking last night,” he mumbled.) And on Saturday night came another, more ceremonial, weigh-in, hosted by the podcaster Joe Rogan—“We’ve got a banging card for you, ladies and gentlemen, at the White House!”—who, with his bald pate, explosively worked-out muscles, and affinity for tight T-shirts, could pass for White’s twin. (This is far from the pair’s only link. As White told Remnick, he was the one to persuade Rogan to endorse Trump on his show in the lead-up to the 2024 Presidential election.)

All this chest-thumping and showboating was so over the top that when I sat down to watch the actual event, which streamed live on Paramount Plus on Sunday night, I wasn’t sure how much more I could take. But as it turned out, there was a lot yet to come. The fights were slightly delayed because of inclement weather, and so we were treated, first, to a quartet of chattering analysts wearing natty, snug suits. As Guns N’ Roses’ “Sweet Child O’ Mine” played vaguely in the distance, the M.M.A. champ Chris Weidman remarked, “As an American, I haven’t felt that type of patriotism in my life.” The U.F.C. is something of an international affair—Brazilians, Irishmen, Georgians, Dagestanis—but the analyst Brendan Fitzgerald took care to assure us, before the action got under way, that nearly every fight on the Freedom 250 card would feature at least one American.

As the event finally got off the ground, what I felt, more than American pride, though, was a kind of overwhelming dislocation, as if I’d suddenly fallen into a K-hole. The pace of the proceedings was hypercharged, and so many random things were happening at such a fast clip that I could only sit back, dazed. There was Trump, stone-faced in a navy suit, greeting the crowd from the White House balcony with White, who was wearing a pair of black-and-white sneakers; there was a military flyover; there was the Joint Armed Forces Color Guard, dressed in their ceremonial dark-blue uniforms; there was the country singer Zac Brown, of the Zac Brown Band, stuffed into a boldly pin-striped suit, singing the National Anthem inside the Octagon, with the red-coated United States Marine Band accompanying him; there were the crowd’s occasional but enthusiastic chants of “U.S.A.! U.S.A.!”; there were Mark Zuckerberg and David Ellison and Ari Emanuel (and his wife, the designer Sarah Staudinger, in an animal-print dress), and the comedians Tony Hinchcliffe and Shane Gillis, not to mention Melania and Barron, Ivanka and Jared, and Donald Trump, Jr., with his new bride, Bettina; there was Joe Rogan, in a shiny, wide gray tie, marvelling forcefully at the “energy” in the air; there were Medal of Honor recipients, at least a couple of them in wheelchairs, who were invited as a show of thanks for their service, and who flanked the fighters as they did their walk-ons; there was a clip of President Reagan talking about Flag Day; there were Octagon Girls, dressed in form-fitting stars-and-stripes-themed outfits, and the Octagon and the Claw’s blinking and flashing lights and screens, and a whole bunch of background music, from a cover version of AC/DC’s “Thunderstruck” to Deep Purple’s “Smoke on the Water,” Hulk Hogan’s theme song, and Drake’s “Started from the Bottom” (there was one Canadian fighter). And there was advertising, so much advertising, both popping up constantly on my laptop screen at home, as the event streamed, and also appearing on every available surface of the Octagon itself. Ads for Monster Energy drink (“The Beast Unleashed”) and Starlink internet and Meta and Jose Cuervo tequila and Bud Light and Polymarket betting and, again, crypto.com—the slew of increasingly indispensable garbage that we, as Americans, now depend on for work and leisure and, sometimes, vice. It was jarring and depressing to see the White House looming there, in such proximity to all of it, especially since the products being hawked included Trump Coins and Truth Social (“the real voice of President Trump”).



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Entrepreneur South Africa

I focus on highlighting the latest in news and politics. With a passion for bringing fresh perspectives to the forefront, I aim to share stories that inspire progress, critical thinking, and informed discussions on today's most pressing issues.

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