Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Randy Rainbow Just Put His Own Spin On 'MAGA' In Hilarious Parody Campaign Ad

Screenshot of Randy Rainbow from video
Randy Rainbow/YouTube

The YouTube star declared it's time to 'Make America Gay Again' with his hilarious new spoof campaign ad for President.

Political satirist and YouTube star Randy Rainbow is at it again, this time putting his own spin on "MAGA" by declaring it's time to "Make America Gay Again" with his hilarious new spoof campaign ad for President.

Pledging to work “to build a stronger America,” Rainbow offered up a funny video in which he jokingly positions himself as a "serious" presidential candidate, though it is of course extremely unlikely that the comedian would choose to widen a playing field that includes President Joe Biden and Donald Trump, whose 2024 rematch is well underway.


Rainbow says:

"Crime. Inflation. Struggling schools. Rob Schneider."
"Our country is dealing with real problems and real problems require real leaders. Really! Our country needs answers, not political buzzwords, cheap rhetoric, or shallow slogans."
"That's why President Randy Rainbow promises to start wearing long-sleeve shirts and then rolling those sleeves up to get to work: Working to build a stronger America by doing whatever the things are that will make America stronger. How do we do it, you ask?"
"Not with division but with unity because unity unites. United in the idea that the American dream is still built on hope and the opportunity to hope to dream to build a better tomorrow today."
"Because he who dreams to hope to build a more united United States of America will choose to challenge the change needed to unify the Democratic spirit of freedom, that familiar flair of freedom our Founding Fathers fundamentally found when they founded America [on] July 4 in Philadelphia, my friends. Frankly, that's how we do it!"

He cheekily adds:

"And that's who we do... it. That's who will do it. I'm with her and her is me. And me time is now."
"Me me me me. Now now now now."

He then says the following while turning away from the camera:

"Hey, can someone get me another grande iced mocha, please? Because I asked like a f**king hour ago."

He concludes:

"It's time to Make America Gay Again. I'm Randy Rainbow and I approve this message."

You can watch Rainbow's latest creation below.

And people loved every minute of it.



Of course, Randy is no stranger to mocking politicians—or elections for that matter.

The comedian had his fans cackling last summer after he lampooned Trump's indictment and subsequent arraignment in Georgia related to his attempts to overturn the 2020 election results.

He brilliantly parodied Barbra Streisand's iconic song "Don't Rain on My Parade" from the classic musical Funny Girl. The result? A song titled "Don't Arraign On His Parade."

Last spring, he couldn't help but celebrate "Trump Arraignment Week" after Trump was indicted in New York for alleged campaign finance violations related to a hush money payment he made to adult film actor Stormy Daniels.

Using the WWII jump blues song "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy" by Don Raye and Hughie Prince, made famous by the Andrews Sisters in 1941, Randy twisted the lyrics to reflect the legal troubles that Trump may be facing.

Rainbow sang that Trump had "met a lovely lady who performed on-screen" who "started yappin’ in two thousand and sixteen and so he signed a bunch of checks."

More from People/donald-trump

Donald Trump; Screenshot of Jeff Bezos
Evan Vucci-Pool/Getty Images; CNBC

Jeff Bezos Just Claimed That Trump Is 'More Mature' In His Second Term—And Critics Can't Even

Amazon founder Jeff Bezos sent heads spinning after claiming during a CNBC interview that President Donald Trump is a "more mature, more disciplined version of himself than he was in his first term."

Bezos, discussing a man who has attacked voting rights multiple times, previously suggested he might try to stay in office indefinitely, and continued to make erratic (and ironic) statements about presidential candidates needing cognitive exams, told anchor Andrew Ross Sorkin that Trump is much more mellow and calmer than he was during the first Trump administration.

Keep ReadingShow less
Tiffany Hernandez speaks during Glendale Community College's commencement ceremony.
@FearedBuck/X

College Graduation Ceremony Erupts In Boos After 'New AI System' Allegedly Misses 'Hundreds' Of Graduates' Names

Nothing says innovation quite like replacing a person reading names with a machine that allegedly forgets to read the names.

That's what happened during Glendale Community College's commencement ceremony on Friday at Desert Diamond Arena in Arizona, where a "new AI system" reportedly skipped hundreds of students and displayed incorrect names as diplomas were handed out. In one instance, the name Michael D. Gonzales was announced while two women received their diplomas.

Keep ReadingShow less
Mandy Moore; Ashley Tisdale
Kristina Bumphrey/Variety/Getty Images; Michael Tullberg/Getty Images

Mandy Moore Finally Spoke Out About That 'Toxic Mom Group' Drama—And She Didn't Hold Back

People might hope that when they make a new friend, they'll be friends for life. But the truth is, most friends will only be there for a reason or a season, like going to school or working together.

For former High School Musical star Ashley Tisdale, that season was new motherhood, a time when she was eager to meet women who understood the questions she had about babies and raising them, but also preferably women who understood what it was like trying to juggle being a successful businesswoman with being a mom, too.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshot of JD Vance; Pope Leo
@atrupar/X; Alessia Giuliani via Vatican Pool/Getty Images

JD Vance Just Tried To Give His Historical Hot Take On Pope Leo's Name—And He Missed The Point Entirely

Vice President JD Vance made a point that seemed pretty obvious to everyone except him when he, mentioning Pope Leo XIV, gave his take on the historical context around the tenure of Pope Leo XIII, who led the Catholic Church from 1878 until 1903.

Speaking at a White House briefing focused on the possible impact of the pope’s upcoming encyclical on artificial intelligence, Vance highlighted the symbolism behind Robert Francis Prevost, the first U.S.-born leader of the Roman Catholic Church, choosing the name Leo XIV.

Keep ReadingShow less
Robot dancing and falling
@ErenChenAI/X

Viral Video Of Robot Dancing Like Michael Jackson Before Crashing Hard On Some Stairs As Crowd Looks On Has The Internet Cackling

Videos of robots absolutely losing their minds in hiliarious ways are starting to become a genre all their own, and the latest entry is one heck of a specimen.

The internet is howling at a video of a robot dancing for a crowd to Michael Jackson's "Billie Jean" before losing its little robot mind when it ran into some stairs.

Keep ReadingShow less