
If you ever needed proof that satire has officially overtaken “serious” commentary, Spencer Pratt just dropped a mock ad that lands somewhere between comedy sketch and brutal cultural diagnosis of America’s crumbling urban order.
In the clip, a frantic mother rushes her daughter to a doctor after the girl develops a shocking new symptom: she starts thinking for herself. Worse, she begins voicing inconvenient observations—like noticing open-air drug use, human waste on sidewalks, and a justice system that seems allergic to consequences.
The doctor, deadpan and ominous, delivers the diagnosis: “The Pratt.”
These Spencer Pratt videos by @dsonoiki are better than 99.9% of political consultant ads. He does it again. pic.twitter.com/hemFACa8xZ
— Clay Travis (@ClayTravis) May 29, 2026
And just like that, the satire snaps into place. The implied “disease” is not confusion or illness—it’s clarity. It’s the moment ordinary Americans stop pretending the chaos isn’t happening right in front of them.
The only prescribed treatment? A full course of corporate media bingeing. In other words: turn off your own eyes, stop trusting what you see, and let the approved narrative do the thinking for you. It’s biting, absurd, and uncomfortably close to how cultural gatekeepers often respond when people step out of line politically.
Even critics who usually roll their eyes at conservative-coded humor couldn’t ignore the punchline here. The video doesn’t lecture—it mocks the idea that noticing disorder itself is some kind of pathology. And that’s exactly why it’s landing with audiences already fed up with progressive denialism around crime, homelessness, and urban decay in major Democrat-run cities.
The reaction online has been predictable: some laugh, some rage, and others quietly admit the joke stings because it reflects what they’re seeing in real life. Americans are increasingly tired of being told not to believe their own eyes.
And if corporate media really is the “cure,” as the sketch suggests, more and more viewers seem uninterested in the prescription.












