Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Sean Spicer Gets Savagely Factchecked After Honoring D-Day On The Totally Wrong Day

Sean Spicer
Paul Archuleta/Getty Images

The former White House Press Secretary seemed to confuse D-Day with the attack on Pearl Harbor.

Sean Spicer—best known for serving as White House Press Secretary under former Republican President Donald Trump—was mocked online after he seemed to confuse D-Day with the attack on Pearl Harbor.

Wednesday, December 7 marked 81 years since the attack on Pearl Harbor, which was a surprise military strike by the Imperial Japanese Navy Air Service upon United States forces at the naval base at Pearl Harbor in Honolulu, Hawaii.


At the time, Hawaii was not yet a state. The United States claimed several once independent island nations as territories partly for the purposes of refueling stops for cross Pacific air and naval missions.

The United States was a neutral country at the time and the attack on its military base in the territory of Hawaii led to its formal entry into World War II the next day.

The attack on December 7, 1941 killed 2,403 Americans and wounded 1,178 others.

But Spicer's commemoration was two years and seven months off because he confused it with D-Day—or June 6, 1944—which was the day Allied forces launched the largest amphibious invasion in the history of warfare and invaded northern France by means of beach landings in Normandy.

Spicer wrote:

"Today is Dday [sic]. It only lives in infamy if we remember and share the story of sacrifice with the next generation."

You can see his tweet—which he ultimately deleted—below.

Twitter screenshot of Sean Spicer's D-Day tweet@seanspicer/Twitter

Spicer later issued a quick apology after he was called out for his error by Republican commentator Michael Reagan.

But the damage was already done and he was quickly mocked by those who noted the error was especially egregious given Spicer's previous role overseeing the communications of the executive branch.

As far as Twitter users were concerned, it was apparent Spicer didn't pay attention in history class.




Since leaving the White House, Spicer has attempted to distance himself from Trump at least somewhat, though his reputation for playing fast and loose with the facts—as he did from the start amid disputes about the size of the crowd at Trump's inauguration—has largely caught up with him.

After a mob of Trump's supporters attacked the United States Capitol on the false premise the 2020 general election was stolen, Forbes warned corporations against hiring Spicer and other Trump "propagandists," stating that "Forbes will assume that everything your company or firm talks about is a lie."

More from People/donald-trump

Screenshot of Roger Marshall
Newsmax

MAGA Senator Slammed After Scolding Americans For Whining About High Gas Prices Amid Iran War—And Wow

Kansas Republican Senator Roger Marshall chastised Americans for complaining about high gas prices and insisted they should consider that their "national security is even more important" than whatever blows are being dealt to their wallets at the gas pump.

Consumer prices are up 3.3% compared to a year ago, largely fueled by a surge in energy costs. The energy index jumped 10.9% in a single month as oil and gas prices climbed sharply. Amid the Iran war and the U.S. blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, oil has risen back to around $100 a barrel, pushing gasoline prices up by a record 25%.

Keep ReadingShow less
Photo and tweet by X user @oatmilkanie
@oatmilkanie/X

Kid Goes Viral After Leaving Sweet Note On Plane For The Person Sitting In Their Seat On The Next Flight

A lot is going on in our world right now that gives us pause, and some of us might feel our hearts breaking under the weight of all of it. That makes acts of kindness, no matter how small they are, more important than ever before.

X user @oatmilkanie shouted out an unidentified child who clearly got the memo when they boarded a plane and discovered that the child had written a note for the next person to sit in their seat, directly on the paper nausea bag that's snuggled in the seat pocket in front of the passenger's knees.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots from @kndllleclaire's TikTok video
@kndllleclaire/TikTok

TikToker Thinks She's Met Her Dream Cowboy At A Bar—But The Internet Has Some Bad News For Her

Sometimes when you meet someone, everything goes so perfectly that you can't help but imagine that it's meant to be.

But one of the harder lessons in life is that, regardless of how perfect the match is, the person may not be as single as they might present themselves to be.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots from @jamar.marriott's Instagram video
@jamar.marriott/Instagram

Dad Goes Viral After Filming His Daughters' Hilariously Dramatic Reaction To Sinking In A Ball Pit

Kids truly say the darnedest things, but there's nothing quite like watching kids play together and invent stories.

33-year-old dad Jamar Marriott was out with his three daughters, Jaida (6), Olivia (8), and Maya (16) at the local trampoline park, which includes an impressively large ball pit.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots from @mich3113.0's TikTok video
@mich3113.0/TikTok

Woman Creeped All The Way Out After Finding Hidden Door In The Ceiling Of Her Airbnb

A lot of us already cannot sleep well when we're visiting someone else's home or staying in a hotel, because we're uncomfortable in a different bed and maybe even a little creeped out in the unusual space.

But discovering a whole other room with a creepy door would quickly transform a space from a rental to something out of a horror movie real quick for anybody.

Keep ReadingShow less