: His public speeches often utilize the vocabulary of a protective father figure, reinforcing the idea that the public is safe only under his absolute "care." 2. The Semiotics of Status and Supremacy

Homelander is more than a villain; he is a mirror. He encodes the anxieties of a society obsessed with celebrity, power, and the terrifying realization that those meant to protect us might be the ones we should fear the most. By deconstructing what Homelander encodes, we gain a clearer view of the symbols used to define power in our own world.

: He uses micro-expressions and targeted silence to broadcast his superiority. When he enters a room, the shift in atmospheric tension is a form of non-verbal encoding that signals everyone else's relative weakness.

: He often breaks the "fourth wall" of corporate PR by appearing to speak "from the heart," which ironically is a calculated move to encode a sense of relatability and populist appeal.