WSJ
How Lego Became a Go-To Meme of the Propaganda Wars.
But Lego stands out for its massive footprint across the world, with revenues reaching $13 billion last year. If people didn't grow up playing with the bricks, which began production in their current form in the 1950s, there's a good chance their children did. And the cartoonish portrayal of combat using childlike blocky figures helps to sanitize gritty images of war, helping it to get past social media filters-and pushing it far beyond Iran's borders.
"Lego works because it is a universally recognized cultural cue, and cultural cues carry preloaded emotional associations that may bypass critical processing," says Lukasz Olejnik, an independent technology consultant and a visiting fellow at the Department of War Studies, King's College London. "The familiar aesthetic lowers the audience's guard precisely when a political payload is delivered."