Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Sarah Cooper Has Stark Message For Fans After Posting Latest Trump Lip-Sync Video

Screenshots of Sarah Cooper
Sarah Cooper/YouTube

After posting her latest Trump lip-sync video, comedian Sarah Cooper urged fans to vote while revealing some unfortunate news.

Comedian Sarah Cooper is back to mocking Donald Trump in a new video, where she lip-syncs some of his more outlandish remarks from his much-criticized debate performance against Vice President Kamala Harris.

However, she had some bad news for fans—this lip-sync video, titled "How to Debate," will be her last one.


Cooper's video features her lip-syncing some of Trump's most controversial remarks during last week's presidential debate, including his claim that Harris is providing gender reassignment surgeries to "illegal aliens who are in prison," his insistence that he was being "sarcastic" when he recently admitted he lost the 2020 election "by a whisker," and his justifications for inviting members of the Taliban to Camp David.

You can watch her video below.

- YouTubewww.youtube.com

Beneath the video, Cooper acknowledged this video would be her last one—and urged fans to vote in November's election:

"This is the final one folks. Kamala will win if we all vote. Then we can finally put this menace out of our collective mind!"

You can see her comment below.

Screenshot of Sarah Cooper's YouTube commentSarah Cooper/YouTube

Cooper also elaborated in the latest edition of her newsletter, "How Was Your Week?":

"I love how much people seem to love these lip syncs (via my YouTube) but it was so triggering to make this one and I felt okay when I was making it but then immediately regretted it. Because I have no interest in Trump at all as person and I don’t want to talk about him, I find him utterly boring."
"I truly feel like this might be my last one. But a few good things came out of it: some voter awareness perhaps and the fact that I set up a small green screen studio in my office and I feel inspired to make more things with it, especially when it comes to the stories in the novel I’m writing."
"I like the idea of bringing some of it to life before it becomes a book."

Many lamented her announcement but praised her nonetheless.



Screenshot of @aw8079 YouTube comment@aw8079/YouTube

Screenshot of @CatherineRichards-r2v' YouTube comment@CatherineRichards-r2v/YouTube

Screenshot of @quintinrichardson8153's YouTube comment@quintinrichardson8153/YouTube

Screenshot of @need-to-know/YouTube@need-to-know/YouTube

Cooper has previously acknowledged the impact her Trump videos have had on her life.

The comedian, who has starred in her own Netflix special, written books, and performed onstage, previously said she "was very scared of just being known as the Trump Girl, and felt like I wanted to distance myself from it."

However, she acknowledged that her material served as a coping mechanism for many who felt exhausted by Trump's presidency:

"Those videos helped so many people, and they also helped me. So I’m thankful for it now, even though I know that if I die right now, my obituary would have the name Donald Trump in it, which is not great, but what are you going to do?"

Cooper added that her videos "exposed the meaninglessness of his words, but I think now that it’s been exposed, there’s nothing left to really do with it."

More from News/2024-election

Lewis Capaldi; Kim Kardashian
Sarah Stier/Getty Images; Karwai Tang/WireImage

Lewis Capaldi Has Hilarious Reaction After He's Accidentally Romantically Linked To Kim Kardashian—But Some Fans Missed The Joke Entirely

This just in: Hollywood's hottest new couple is Kim Kardashian and... Lewis Capaldi?

Okay not really, but the internet thought so for a hot minute after the two were thought to be spotted together at Justin Bieber's Coachella performance over the weekend.

Keep ReadingShow less
Donald Trump; Gregg Phillips
Roberto Schmidt/Getty Images; Al Drago/Getty Images

Trump Reacts To Conspiracy Theorist FEMA Official Who Claims He Once Teleported To A Waffle House

President Donald Trump appeared noticeably confused after CNN asked him about FEMA official Gregg Phillips' bizarre claim that he once teleported to a Waffle House 50 miles away.

Phillips, a former top Texas health official, was appointed in December to lead FEMA’s Office of Response and Recovery—a division with more than 1,000 employees—despite a background that raised questions. For instance, before taking the role, he had made unverified claims, including allegations about election fraud.

Keep ReadingShow less
Donald Trump; Riley Gaines
Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images; Ivan Apfel/Getty Images

Trump Just Made A Brutal Dig At Anti-Trans Swimmer Riley Gaines After She Criticized His AI Jesus Photo—And Yikes

President Donald Trump lashed out in typical fashion at former swimmer and anti-trans activist Riley Gaines after she criticized his decision to post an AI-generated image of himself as Jesus Christ.

Last week, the Pope criticized Trump's widely unpopular war in Iran and called on the world "to reject war, especially a war which many people have said is an unjust war, which is continuing to escalate and is not resolving anything."

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshot of JD Vance
Fox News

JD Vance Ripped After Directly Contradicting Trump's Defense Of His AI Jesus Photo—And Whoops!

Vice President JD Vance was mocked online after he directly contradicted President Donald Trump's defense for why he posted an AI-generated image of himself as Jesus Christ.

Last week, the Pope criticized Trump's widely unpopular war in Iran and called on the world "to reject war, especially a war which many people have said is an unjust war, which is continuing to escalate and is not resolving anything."

Keep ReadingShow less
Fox News Just Complained About How Low Teen Pregnancy Rates Currently Are—And WTF‽‽

Fox News Just Complained About How Low Teen Pregnancy Rates Currently Are—And WTF‽‽

During a Friday segment on Fox News's America’s Newsroom with anchor Dana Perino, senior medical analyst Dr. Marc Siegel called a declining birth rate among people aged 15-19 a "problem."

The discussion revolved around new CDC data showing the United States fertility rate, based on birth rates, has fallen to a record low based. The fertility rate fell 7 percent in 2025, from 53.8 births per 1,000 childbearing aged women—defined as age 15 to 44—in 2024 to 53.1, according to a report released by the CDC's National Center for Health Statistics on Thursday.

Keep ReadingShow less