This working note examines how financial crime circulates as digital content in Brazil, through money laundering humor, tax evasion jokes, luxury aesthetics, and corruption-coded short-form video. Drawing on criminological literature on criminal governance and normalization, it argues that the memeification of illegality reflects a broader cultural adaptation to organized crime rather than mere entertainment. The note introduces the concept of illicit wealth aesthetics as an entry point for analyzing how criminal power becomes socially legible before it becomes institutionally legible. Published as a citable standalone record for a chapter in When Crime Governs: Brazil, Criminal Power, and the Rise of Narco-State Dynamics (2026). Keywords: criminal governance, Brazil, organized crime, social media, TikTok, money laundering, tax evasion, normalization, digital culture, narco-state, financial crime, short-form video, criminology, Latin America
Victor Kurose (Sun,) studied this question.
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