The Oklahoman

Teens may have inflated expected rally turnout

- By Joshua Bote

President Donald Trump's rally Saturday night in Tulsa featured a smallertha­n- expected crowd, with rows of empty seats at the 19,000-capacity BOK Center despite an announceme­nt of more than 1 million ticket requests for the event. Some TikTok users and K-pop fans on Twitter believe they could have been responsibl­e for the lower turnout.

After the Trump re-election campaign opened up registrati­on for free tickets to the rally, K-pop fans on Twitter shared informatio­n on how to sign up — with directives to get tickets but not attend.

The posts, according to The New York Times, were deleted so “mainstream” social media users wouldn't catch wind of their campaign.

The phenomenon later spread onto TikTok, where scores of users encouraged their followers to do the same.

Mary Jo Laupp, a 51-year-old woman who has branded herself as the #TikTokGran­dma, was one of the first to call for the protests on that platform.

In a June 12 TikTok sharing her frustratio­n with a rally taking place on Juneteenth in Tulsa — the rally was moved a day later by Trump's campaign — she explained how to reserve tickets to the rally.

“Did you know you can make sure there are empty seats at Trump's rally?” she captioned the video, which has amassed 706,000 likes on the platform as of Sunday.

The Trump campaign pushed back on the influence of the social media effort to reduce the crowd size.

“Registerin­g for a rally means you've RSVPed with a cell phone number and we constantly weed out bogus numbers, as we did with tens of thousands at the Tulsa rally, in calculatin­g our possible attendee pool,” Trump 2020 campaign manager Brad Parscale said in a statement released Sunday.

“What makes this lame attempt at hacking our events even more foolish is the fact that every rally is general admission—entry is on a first-come-first-served basis and prior registrati­on is not required.”

Rep. Alexandria

Ocasio- Cortez praised t he collective involved in the action, telling Parscale “you just got ROCKED by teens on TikTok.”

“Shout out to Zoomers,” she said, referring to the largely Gen Z makeup of these groups. “Y'all make me so proud.”

According to the cached page promoting the event on Trump's official reelection website, those who registered for tickets could reserve two per mobile phone number. The tickets, though, do not guarantee seats inside the arena. The event page said that: “all tickets are subject to first come first serve basis.”

This isn' t the first coordinate­d action led by K-pop fans, who have largely selfdirect­ed movements to shut down white supremacis­t hashtags on Twitter and overload police department apps requesting videos of protesters nationwide with videos of K-pop performers, which are known colloquial­ly as “fancams.”

Fans of the hugely popular group BTS also matched a $1 million donation by the boy band to the Black Lives Matter movement.

 ?? [SARAH PHIPPS/ THE OKLAHOMAN] ?? Supporters listen to President Donald Trump speak during a rally at the BOK Center in Tulsa on Saturday.
[SARAH PHIPPS/ THE OKLAHOMAN] Supporters listen to President Donald Trump speak during a rally at the BOK Center in Tulsa on Saturday.

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