Audi’s Appropriation of Bob Dylan: The Commodification of Rebellion in the Age of Corporate Fraud

Audi’s new RS 5 advertisement, drawing inspiration from Bob Dylan’s electrified 1965 Newport performance, exemplifies the commodification of cultural rebellion in late capitalism. What once represented a radical artistic act is now simply a marketing tool for a luxury hybrid car made by a company involved in mass layoffs, emissions scandals, and undercutting wages worldwide. The ad does not celebrate rebellion; instead, it signifies its end.

A Masterclass in Late‑Capitalist Cultural Theft

Audi’s RS 5 advertisement is more than just cynical; it serves as a prime example. It precisely illustrates how capitalist marketing consumes cultural history, removing its rebellious edge, and turns it into a luxury lifestyle statement for the wealthy. “The systematic plundering of every genuinely rebellious cultural moment and its repackaging as a sales pitch for luxury commodities.”

The agency’s choice to base the commercial on Bob Dylan’s 1965 electric performance at Newport isn’t just a creative move; it’s a confession. It exposes how much the advertising industry relies on the symbolic remnants of past rebellions to give life to products that lack any genuine social significance.

What Dylan’s Electric Turn Actually Represented

When Dylan took the stage in Newport wielding a Fender Stratocaster, he was not just changing instruments. He was boldly rejecting the stifling moralism of the folk community, which wanted to keep him as a mere “protest singer”—a symbol of their own complacent radicalism. “Dylan was breaking with the suffocating constraints of a folk establishment… It was, in its own way, a genuine act of artistic self-emancipation.”

The booing that ensued was not directed at electricity itself but at the idea of autonomy. Dylan rejected being owned by a movement that had become a rigid cultural bureaucracy. His act was a break—an assertion of artistic freedom against institutional limitations. Audi’s use of this moment is especially offensive because the company embodies the opposite idea: subordinating human creativity, work, and culture to the profit motives of global capital.

The Auto Industry’s Record: Fraud, Layoffs, and the Assault on Workers

Audi is not a neutral cultural entity. As a subsidiary of Volkswagen Group, it was involved in an emissions-cheating scandal that was one of the most widespread corporate frauds of the 21st century. The company has repeatedly cut jobs to stay profitable amid growing global competition. “The 9,500 jobs Audi eliminated in Germany in 2019, along with another 7,500 planned for 2025, reflect the harsh reality behind the polished image of ‘breaking tradition.’

The “tradition” being challenged is not about artistic conformity but the social contract with the working class. The hybrid RS 5 is made by workers facing ongoing attacks on their wages and conditions, even as the company promotes the vehicle as a symbol of personal freedom.

The Mechanics of Co‑optation: How Capitalism Consumes Rebellion

The ad illustrates a key principle of capitalist cultural production: it cannot create genuine rebellion, only turn it into a commodity. Each oppositional movement—such as the 1960s counterculture, punk, and hip-hop—goes through the same process of neutralization. “Every authentic artistic rebellion… is eventually stripped of its social significance, sanitized, and repackaged for consumers as a lifestyle accessory.”

Audi isn’t just selling a car; it’s offering a feeling—the thrill of breaking rules without facing social consequences. The buyer is encouraged to see themselves as Dylan at Newport—yet stay embedded in luxury culture. This represents rebellion without danger, dissent without repercussions, and history without effort.

The Fraudulent “Evolution” of the Hybrid RS 5

The ad’s theme of “embracing evolution” with a hybrid powertrain cleverly reverses expectations. The move to hybrid and electric vehicles in luxury isn’t a daring step toward the future but rather a reluctant response to regulations and market forces. “It’s the auto industry being pushed, reluctantly and noisily, to make only the minimal changes needed to keep selling cars.”

The RS 5 hybrid continues to be what every RS Audi has historically been: a high-performance vehicle aimed at the wealthy. Its eco-friendly image is primarily a marketing strategy, not an indication of social change.

Dylan’s Own Trajectory: From Rebellion to Corporate Asset

Dylan himself embodies the final irony of the advertisement. The artist who once penned “Masters of War” sold his entire songwriting catalogue to Universal Music Group in 2020 for approximately $300 million. As one observes his journey from Newport ’65 to this major deal, it exemplifies how capitalism often absorbs and neutralizes acts of artistic rebellion. Dylan’s past work, originally a tool against the establishment, now functions as an asset for the world’s largest music corporation. The Audi advertisement represents the ultimate stage of this transformation: turning rebellion into a commercial commodity.

The Socialist Alternative: What Real Evolution Would Look Like

The working class does not require a luxury hybrid that relies on the superficial allure of a long-gone rebellion. Instead, it needs control over the means of production, including the auto industry. This involves a socialist transformation of society—producing goods based on social needs rather than private profit.

Genuine evolution involves workers democratically controlling auto plants, reorganizing production based on human needs, and freeing culture from a profit-driven system that stifles it. Audi’s ad does not celebrate rebellion but instead commodifies it. Our current challenge is not to buy into the illusion of freedom but to strive for actual freedom.