Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Trump Awkwardly Denies Ever Having Red Marks On His Hand With Painfully On-Brand Excuse

Donald Trump
CHARLY TRIBALLEAU/AFP via Getty Images

The ex-President blamed 'A.I.' after Fox News reporter Mark Meredith remarked how it looked like the red splotches on his hands seen in recent photographs seemed to have healed.

Blaming A.I. is apparently former Republican President Donald Trump's new "fake news."

Trump is claiming the viral photos of him showing his hand covered in red sores could have been fake A.I. creations after being asked about them on Fox News.


When Fox's Mark Meredith asked him about his injured hand, Trump pretended not to have any idea what he was talking about.

Meredith asked Trump:

“How’s your hand? It looks like it’s better now.”

Trump feigned ignorance by asking "my hand?" When Meredith clarified that he was referencing the viral photos, he claimed not to have seen them and said "maybe it’s A.I."

It is, of course, impossible that he had no idea what Meredith was referencing, but it's also absurdly implausible. Even if they were A.I. fakes, Trump notoriously spends all of his time glued to television news.

And the photos were a viral sensation in part because of the many theories they spawned, which no doubt Trump would have heard and privately raged about.

One theory came from the hosts of MSNBC's Morning Joe, who posited that the sores were blisters Trump popped by slamming his hands on the table in the federal courtroom during E. Jean Carroll's damages trial.

Trump was said to be extremely agitated throughout the proceedings.

But Trump's rabid supporters had an alternate, more plausible theory: that the sores were simply blisters Trump sustained while golfing without wearing gloves.

Whatever the origin, the photos were...well gross, and everywhere, and he is lying about not knowing about them, not that that's exactly surprising.

And on social media, Trump's denials drew a lot of eye-rolls and mockery.







Anyway, we look forward to Trump blaming everything he says and does on A.I. throughout the rest of the election season as he's called out on his lies and hypocrisies too numerous to count.

More from People/donald-trump

Characters from 'Win or Lose'
Disney/Pixar

Disney Slammed For Adding Christian Character To Show After Cutting Trans Storyline

Disney came under fire for cutting a trans storyline and adding an openly Christian character in the new animated Pixar series Win or Lose on Disney+.

The contradictory pivot comes as part of the company's new commitment to significantly alter its diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives in response to a cultural shift towards conservatism pushed by Republican President Donald Trump's second White House term.

Keep ReadingShow less
Rep. Al Green
WIN MCNAMEE/POOL/AFP via Getty Images

Democrat Who Was Kicked Out Of Trump's Speech Posts Defiant Message In Face Of Censure Vote

Before facing a censure vote for disrupting Republican President Donald Trump's address to a joint session of Congress, Texas Democratic Representative Al Green vehemently expressed that he would not back down from his fight against the injustice facing constituents relying on Medicaid.

On Tuesday, Green stood up during Trump's mostly partisan congressional address and heckled Trump after the President claimed he had won a governing mandate from voters, to which Green yelled, “You have no mandate!"

Keep ReadingShow less
Cassandra Peterson as Elvira, Elon Musk
Michael Tran/FilmMagic; Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

MAGA Fumes After Elvira Donates Tesla To NPR With Blunt Message For Musk In Viral Video

Actor and activist Cassandra Peterson—best known for playing the gothic horror character Elvira, Mistress of the Dark—had social media users cackling after she mocked billionaire Elon Musk by painting "Elon sux" on the side of her Tesla before donating it to NPR, angering Trump supporters in the process.

In her debut video, Peterson steps away from her iconic Elvira persona. Gone are the signature brunette wig and the plunging black gown — instead, she sports a casual black beanie.

Keep ReadingShow less
Back view shot of a young guy, dressed in a suit. He looks out into Times Square.
Photo by Saulo Mohana on Unsplash

People Debate Which Professions Will Die Out Within A Decade

With the rise of AI and automation, many careers feel like they could be on the chopping block.

As much as some life advancements in science and labor have been brilliant, many human-based positions are deemed irrelevant.

Keep ReadingShow less
ghost town in western United States
Nadia Jamnik on Unsplash

Americans Describe The Creepiest Town They Ever Visited On A Road Trip

I've lived in a small town in far Northern Maine for most of my life.

Let me just say, there's a reason Stephen King bases most of his horror stories in rural Maine.

Keep ReadingShow less