Grainy photographs of Lindsey Graham relaxing at Disney World spread across the internet in late March, including one image that showed the South Carolina senator gripping a pink-and-blue bubble wand inspired by The Little Mermaid.
The pictures were published after a citizen vacationer noticed Graham at the theme park and sent them in, another sign that TMZ has pushed its camera lens farther into politics after years of chasing celebrity spectacle. The tabloid widened its coverage to officials across the political spectrum in the same stretch that it ran surreptitious photos of John James unwinding in the Caribbean and Marsha Blackburn with a suitcase at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport. It also published images of Ted Cruz sitting on a plane.
The timing matters because TMZ’s political gallery did not start with Graham. On February 14, after the latest U.S. partial government shutdown began, Harvey Levin put out a call for photos of congresspeople relishing their spring recess, and TMZ soon reported that more than thirty members of Congress were in Edinburgh, Scotland, during the break. The site paired that with the kind of breathless tone it has long used for entertainment scoops, once declaring, “BUST OUT THE BAGPIPES, WE’RE IN SCOTLAND!!!”
That blend of gossip and politics has made TMZ a potent but controversial player, known for up-to-the-minute scoops and for paying sources for scandalous tips. The Graham images fit the same pattern: an elected official, caught off guard, turned into tabloid content. It is the latest example of how far the outlet’s appetite for surveillance has traveled since 2016, when one of its own reporters called TMZ “a festering boil on the anus of American media.”
The question now is not whether TMZ will keep chasing lawmakers. It already has. The real answer is that the tabloid has made members of Congress fair game in the same way it once made celebrities fair game, and Graham’s Disney World stop is simply the image that brought that shift into the open.