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Donald Trump has spent his entire career mocking people — their looks, their intelligence, their weight, their voices, anything he can weaponize. And it’s gotten even worse over the last month as he’s ramped up attacks on women reporters who challenge him.
Donald Trump has spent his entire career mocking people — their looks, their intelligence, their weight, their voices, anything he can weaponize. And it’s gotten even worse over the last month as he’s ramped up attacks on women reporters who challenge him.
So I asked AI to strip away the daily orange pancake makeup and the obvious hair transplants to give us a realistic look at the nearly 80-year-old man doing all the ridiculing.

nable to quash unfavorable reporting by slinging schoolyard taunts and taking away access, the Trump administration has taken a new tack: putting a target on individual journalists, under the guise of calling out “media bias.”
Last week the White House debuted a so-called media bias portal on its website that catalogs alleged “false and misleading stories.” Its database—titled the “Offender Hall of Shame”—is searchable by publication and reporter, and flags reports for offenses such as “misrepresentation” and “left-wing lunacy.” On Tuesday, the administration added a “tipline” to the initiative: “Help expose the worst of the worst,” the page reads. “If you know of any media outlet misrepresenting the Trump Administration, and skewing the truth, link the article below for our team to review it!”
As of Friday afternoon, there were 39 “claims” recorded on the site. Among them: a New York Times report on the 79-year-old Donald Trump’s health and stamina (“bias” and “malpractice”) and several reports about the president’s recent suggestion that Democrats should be executed for publishing a video encouraging military personnel not to obey unlawful orders (Trump simply “called for them to be held accountable” for “inciting sedition,” according to the White House). The Washington Post on Thursday was named “media offender of the week” for its reporting on the second strike the United States conducted on an alleged drug boat in September to kill two men who had survived the first attack—a potential war crime that has led even some Republicans to express concerns, and that has intensified pressure on Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth.
