

Look up the page for the Linkin Park song and the very first comment says.
But the mystery remains unsolved: Why would he want to - unless he’s sending a secret message that he really wants to lose? A video tweeted by Trump was removed from Twitter Saturday after Linkin Park’s management company filed a copyright claim, which probably won’t keep him from continuing to use the song as part of his rally playlist, as he did in Tulsa. But that scarcely begins to compare to the puzzlement over why he or his campaign believe Linkin Park’s “In the End” is a motivational anthem, as opposed to one of the most abjectly depressing and de-motivating rock songs ever to achieve hit status. I do not think it means what you think it means.”įrom the 2016 campaign through the present day, music fans have been baffled by Trump’s use of the Rolling Stones’ “You Can’t Always Get What You Want” as his walk-off music at rallies. If “The Princess Bride’s” Inigo Montoya were to ever attend a Donald Trump rally or watch his campaign’s videos, it’s clear what he’d say: “You keep using that song.
