Editorial on the World Cup Awakening
Laura Lawson, a member of Scotland's Tartan Army, stood in her hotel room earlier this week, phone propped up, tears streaming down her face, and recorded a three-minute video that would be watched by millions.
She wasn't crying about a match. She was crying about us.
"I've been overwhelmed by the outpouring of kindness and gratitude and love," she said. "I'm just blown away by how much kindness the American people have shown us."
Scroll through TikTok right now and you'll find hundreds of these videos. A Swedish woman losing her mind over ranch dressing and yellow school buses. A German man wandering the fluorescent-lit aisles of Buc-ee's like he'd discovered a new continent. Japanese fans meticulously folding laundry and cleaning their section of the stadium after a match and American stadium workers staring in disbelief. An Englishman in a Walmart, genuinely struggling to process that he could buy car parts, a flat-screen television, and a rifle under one roof.
THIS IS THE BEST FRIED CHICKEN FOOD EVER, wrote Scotland supporter Blair McNally after visiting a Raising Cane's in Boston. WE NEED THIS IN THE UK!!
These videos are funny. They're heart warming. But underneath the surface level entertainment, something deeper is happening something that should force a reckoning.
Here's the recurring theme that keeps surfacing in these posts, sometimes explicit, often unspoken. This is not the country they were promised.
Shaun Alexander, a content creator from Edinburgh whose Tartan Army videos have racked up millions of views, put it plainly: "Whenever the US is in the news in the UK, I think it tends to be regarding political stuff: What did the White House say about this or that, or what's happening in conflicts in the Middle East. The news doesn't tend to cover culture."
Translation: The only America the world sees through their media diet is a caricature a greatest-hits reel of political dysfunction, racial strife, and foreign policy controversies. They're fed a steady stream of the worst moments, the angriest voices, the most divisive headlines, packaged and exported as though that's the whole story.
Then they land at JFK or Logan or O'Hare. They get into an Uber. The driver recommends a barbecue spot. The stranger at the next table says Welcome to America. The gas station has 120 pumps and sells brisket that would be considered high end cuisine in half of Europe. The waitress calls them honey and refills their drink before they even ask.
The cognitive dissonance is almost audible.
Let's be honest about what's happening here. For decades, the dominant narrative about America broadcast both to international audiences and to Americans themselves has been curated by institutions with a vested interest in making the country look broken, dangerous, and uniquely sinful.
The same media ecosystem that tells Europeans America is a racist, gun obsessed hell scape tells Americans the same thing every night. The same voices that paint half the country as irredeemable deplorables then wonder why national morale is in the gutter. They've been running a psy-op on two continents simultaneously, and the World Cup has accidentally blown their cover.
A British entrepreneur named Marina De Buchi, who moved to California last year, addressed one of the laziest anti-American tropes directly: "A lot of people say Americans are fake and I just don't think that's true. I think Americans are just really nice and friendly."
Imagine that. The fake friendliness foreigners have been warned about turns out to be actual friendliness. The superficial culture turns out to be genuinely welcoming. The dangerous streets turn out to be filled with people who'll give you directions, buy you a beer, and ask about your hometown.
Here's where it gets uncomfortable. The people most surprised by these viral videos aren't the foreigners they're Americans.
"I think for Americans, it's refreshing to them to hear good things," De Buchi said. "They hear a lot of bad at the moment."
Refreshing. That's the word she chose. As in, hearing something positive about their own country is a novelty. That should terrify anyone who cares about the health of this nation.
A significant portion of the American population concentrated in certain political tribes, certain media bubbles, certain academic institutions has been marinating in self loathing for so long that they've forgotten what they have. They've been told, repeatedly and with great moral certainty, that America is fundamentally flawed, that its founding was illegitimate, that its prosperity is stolen, that its freedoms are a sham. And many of them believed it, because they'd never seen anything else.
The World Cup visitors are holding up a mirror, and for the first time in years, some Americans are seeing a reflection that doesn't make them wince.
You want a metaphor for what's happening? The Tartan Army thousands of Scots in kilts and bagpipes descended on Boston with such enthusiasm that they literally drank the Samuel Adams tap room out of beer. They drank a plane out of beer on the way over. They filled the streets with singing. They marched through the city like they'd just liberated it.
And Boston, a city not exactly famous for being warm and fuzzy, embraced them right back. Police officers danced with Cape Verde fans. Strangers bought rounds for Belgians. The whole thing became what one observer called the healing that we all needed.
Jim Rooney of the Boston Chamber of Commerce put it simply, "They've been all over the place and it's brought some energy and life."
Scottish fan Andy Reid, sporting an American flag hat and grinning ear to ear, said he hopes the World Cup helps Americans drop the lies, drop the hate and recognize how lucky they are, and how appreciative we are of how you made us feel.
Read that again. A foreign visitor had to come here and tell us to appreciate what we have.
This brings us to the harder truth. The reason so many Americans have forgotten what makes this country exceptional isn't just media propaganda it's the material comfort that insulates people from having to think about it.
The arrangement is simple and ancient. Take the free stuff, don't ask questions, and for God's sake don't compare your situation to anywhere else because that might raise uncomfortable thoughts. The government will handle your healthcare decisions. The bureaucracy will manage your retirement. The algorithms will tell you what to think. The media will tell you what to be outraged about. Just stay comfortable, stay entertained, stay quiet.
But free stuff is never free. The cost is deferred, not eliminated. And the bill, when it comes, won't just be economic. It'll be the slow realization that the agency you traded for comfort is gone, and the people who took it aren't giving it back.
The World Cup visitors are accidentally exposing this dynamic. They're walking through American cities with wide eyes, marveling at things Americans have been trained to ignore or despise the sheer scale of choice, the casual friendliness, the freedom to be left alone, the sense that you can reinvent yourself here in a way that's simply not possible in most of the world.
The tournament will wrap up. The Tartan Army will fly home, probably still singing. The TikTok videos will fade from the algorithm. Buc-ee's will go back to being just a gas station. And the question is whether anything sticks.
Will the Americans who got teary eyed watching Laura Lawson's video remember that feeling six months from now? Will the young progressive who's never left Brooklyn internalize that maybe, just maybe, the country isn't the irredeemable nightmare they've been taught? Will anyone in the legacy media do any self reflection about the gap between the America they portray and the America hundreds of thousands of foreigners just experienced firsthand?
Probably not. Because the business model depends on keeping people afraid and divided. Because the political machine depends on voters who believe the country is broken and only the right leaders can fix it. Because the grift requires a population convinced they're victims of a system that's rigged against them, rather than beneficiaries of a system that however imperfect remains the most dynamic experiment in human freedom ever attempted.
But for a few weeks in the summer of 2026, the mask slipped. Hundreds of thousands of people from every corner of the globe landed on American soil expecting dystopia and found something closer to the opposite. They found friendly strangers, ridiculous portion sizes, gas stations that double as culinary destinations, and a population that when you strip away the politics and the media narratives and the online outrage is genuinely decent.
They found the America that still exists underneath all the noise.
And if enough of us remember what they saw, maybe we'll fight harder to keep it.
"I believe the World Cup changed the mindset," said Felipe Sanchez, an Emirates flight attendant watching the festivities unfold. "I think they're more open."
Maybe we should be too.
Sources:
FIFA World Cup 2026 USA foreign visitors reactions loving America viral videos
They came for the World Cup. They fell in love with Buc-ee’s and ranch dip. nbcnews.com
World Cup visitors celebrate the best of America on social media bostonglobe.com
See International World Cup Fans Go All In on American Culture youtube.com
World Cup fans surprised America positive TikTok videos 2026
World Cup visitors celebrate the best of America on social media bostonglobe.com
World Cup visitors are going viral for their reactions to everyday ... abcnews.com
Viral videos of World Cup tourists experiencing American classics | FOX 26 Houston fox26houston.com
World Cup fans from around the world are wowed by United States thehill.com
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