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‘Idiocracy’ Tops NYT Poll as the “Definitive Movie That Represents America at 250 Years”

July 5, 2026 Jordan Ruimy

More than 3000 readers responded to a New York Times poll asking which film best captures the American experience, offering hundreds of titles, most of them classics. While opinions varied widely, there was a clear, and unusual, winner.

Mike Judge’s 2006 satire “Idiocracy” received more mentions than any other film. Many readers described it as an accurate depiction of modern America, with several commenting that it has become less a comedy than a documentary.

Yes, the film where a professional wrestler-turned-president named Dwayne Elizondo Mountain Dew Herbert Camacho fires a machine gun into the air while declaring war on “problem” crops, where hospitals use energy drinks for medicine, where courtroom proceedings are replaced by chaotic shouting matches, and where basic language itself has deteriorated into simplified slang, is what now represents America in its 250th birthday.

The film imagines a society where anti-intellectualism has become normalized, education has collapsed, and corporations dominate public life to the point that basic services are branded, monetized, and aggressively dumbed down. That Judge’s “Idiocracy” has become the most-cited answer in a major poll about the definitive American film says less about the movie’s literal predictions and more about the current cultural mood.

Judge’s low-budget satire underperformed upon release in 2006 and was largely ignored by its studio. Nearly two decades later, however, audiences have increasingly embraced it.

Interestingly, Judge has made two films that were largely shrugged off when they first came out, but are now widely seen as cult classics. “Office Space” (1999) is the other. A modest performer on release and initially treated as a niche comedy, it has since taken on a second life as a defining portrait of corporate burnout and soulless office work.

Behind “Idiocracy” in the New York Times poll were “The Godfather,” “Easy Rider,” “American Graffiti,” and “Do the Right Thing,” each praised for exploring different aspects of the American experience. Other frequently cited films included “Network,” “The Grapes of Wrath,” “To Kill a Mockingbird,” and “Dr. Strangelove.”

Yet, “Idiocracy” towered above them all. This says as much about the lens through which some Americans currently view the country as it does about the movie itself.

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