Portland's protest frogs are dead serious about absurdity
Portlands protest frogs are dead serious about absurdity
In a battle of optics and performance, Portland is primed to meet the moment
By Andi Zeisler
Senior Writer
Published October 16, 2025 1:30PM (EDT)

(Salon) Down the street from ICE headquarters on the south Portland waterfront, a rainbow of costumes hung on a makeshift rack, a vertical banner with FREE in block letters attached. Available inflatables included a couple of sharks, a dinosaur or two, at least one cow and a banana, all ready to be pumped up for the cause. The cause, of course, is nonviolently protesting ICE while providing a maximally absurdist counternarrative to the assertion, first voiced by Donald Trump earlier this month and echoed near-constantly since by his administration and its media loyalists, that Portland is a war-ravaged burning hellhole.
You might have seen still photos and Instagram Reels of these creatures in the weeks since Trump announced that he intended to deploy the National Guard to take back the citys teeming streets: The giant frog staring down a wall of ICE agents, the dinosaurs and raccoons shaking ass at a late-night dance party highlighted on The Daily Show last week. Those front-liners are just the start of the candy-colored confrontation ahead: A new crowdfunding initiative that launched last weekend, Operation Inflation, is taking donations to make sure every protester who wants to take part can do so inexpensively and enlargeably. From the outside, it might look like a deeply unserious set of tactics for a moment in which peoples lives are in real danger. But the media context in which that danger unfolds is a false narrative pursued by an authoritarian administration determined to wage war on blue cities. Its necessary to fight fire with fire and in this case, that means fighting performance with performance.
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When you grow up in Portland, you grow up feeling like loud, creative aesthetic expression is how you participate in politics and in things like protest, says Claire Aubin, a historian of the United States who lectures at Yale and hosts the history podcast This Guy Sucked. Fighting optics with optics is a longtime protest strategy [here], but the media and even people who know protests often see Portlands as anomalies.
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If there were ever a rational way to respond to the presidents nonsensically grandiose fearmongering I dont know what could be worse than Portland. You dont even have sewers anymore. They dont even put glass up. They put plywood on their windows that time has passed, especially since hes achieved enough media capture that hes never pushed to provide specifics for his wild claims. Still, as bizarre as Trumps whoppers are, he is simply not going to win a war of weirdness in a city where more than a thousand residents braved Sundays harsh weather to participate in an Emergency Naked Bike Ride. Portland is by no metric a perfect city, but its one whose combination of staunch anti-authoritarianism and literal balls-out commitment to absurdism meets this uniquely chaotic moment. ...................(more)
https://www.salon.com/2025/10/16/portlands-protest-frogs-are-dead-serious-about-absurdity/
Amaryllis
(10,760 posts)Seth Todd, the 25-year-old protester who initially donned the concerned-looking frog costume told Le Monde that it was a strategy to cut the narratives of the Trump administration, which says we are extremely violent. Viewers who see a line of guns pointed at mouthy, black-clad activists and think, Well, they do look violent just cant make the same argument about those same guns drawn on an oversized, silent frog. The costumes work not just by refuting the presidents characterization of Portland as a city of violent anarchists, but by refusing to grant ICE a level playing field on which to perform their strongman (and woman) cosplay: Nice body armor, champ, but youre going to look stupid when youre photographed trying to take down an inflatable frog.