This article analyses a viral X post in which the author used Grok, an AI image generator, to produce a ‘makeunder’ of newly elected Green MP Hannah Spencer, modelled on the BBC Three reality series Snog Marry Avoid? (2008-2013). Drawing on Pickering’s (2014) analysis of makeover television and class, Kay’s (2020) concept of communicative injustice, and Parry and Johnson’s (2021) study of gendered parliamentary performance, it argues that the post is symptomatic of a broader cultural logic in which the disciplinary conventions of British makeover television have migrated into political life. Central to this argument is the role of AI: by passing an ideological verdict about a woman’s appearance through a generative model, the post reproduces the pseudo-objectivity of Snog, Marry, Avoid? and its surveillance mechanism (POD), recasting aesthetic judgement as neutral analysis. The article contends that Spencer’s style - confident, idiosyncratic, and resistant to Westminster’s professional-feminine norms - is best understood as non-assimilation, and that the hostility it provoked reveals class and gender as the unmarked axes around which both makeover culture and political legitimacy continue to turn.
Laura Minor (Wed,) studied this question.