
Ex-GOP strategist Rick Wilson has laid bare what he calls the "ultimate collapse of the MAGA self-image," pointing to an unlikely source: Pornhub search data tied to Byron Noem, husband of South Dakota Governor Kristi Noem.
Wilson noted that the word "bimbofication" received a 724% increase in searches on the adult materials website on April 1, just after the scandal broke about Byron Noem's purported online sexual activities.
Wilson thinks the discovery reveals a stunning contradiction at the heart of the movement. For years, MAGA leaders have positioned themselves as defenders of "traditional values," launching crusades against drag queen story hours and Pride displays at retailers. They've championed a rigid, performative masculinity centered on "God, Guns, and Guts"—a calculated image of stern, 1950s-style moral rectitude.
Yet Wilson's analysis suggests a vastly different private reality. The surge in specific adult content searches associated with the Noem connection exposes what Wilson describes as the movement's "dark, sticky corners"—the gap between public persona and actual behavior that defines much of modern MAGA politics.
"The irony isn’t just rich; it’s practically dripping. We are witnessing the ultimate collapse of the MAGA self-image, the supposed vanguard of 'God, Guns, and Guts' into a puddle of lace-trimmed, digital hypocrisy," he wrote on Friday.
Wilson argues that movement leaders demand loyalty to an exaggerated alpha-male aesthetic while allegedly indulging in precisely the kind of sexual expression they publicly condemn. He notes that the same politicians who rail against "degeneracy" and "perversion" appear to have their own complicated relationships with taboo content.
Wilson's commentary extends beyond simple hypocrisy. He characterizes the phenomenon as evidence of a systemic contradiction within the movement itself—one built on projection and performative outrage rather than consistent values. The movement, he suggests, hasn't just lost moral authority; it's traded intellectual consistency for digital subscriptions to platforms its members would publicly vote to ban.
The Pornhub data serves as an uncomfortable reminder that public political personas and private digital behavior often exist in complete opposition, particularly among those who've made moral judgment central to their political brand.





