Newsweek annihilated on social media over bizarre framing of Trump McDonald's story: 'The Pulitzer Prize is on the way'



Former President Donald Trump visited a McDonald's fast-food restaurant over the weekend to hand out french fries, but Newsweek's attempt to "debunk" the incident is being mocked and ridiculed on social media.

Trump put on an apron and learned how to cook some of the menu items at the McDonald's in Feasterville-Trevose, Pennsylvania. The event produced amusing photos of the billionaire working the deep fryers and passing out Bic Macs at the drive-thru window.

'Wait, you’re telling me that Trump didn’t fill out an application and organically start working at a PA McDonald’s ... he staged it all?'

The photo op went viral on social media, but Newsweek tried to find a nefarious angle in an attempt to undermine the effect of the clever publicity stunt.

"Rumors have been circulating on social media that former President Donald Trump's visit to the popular fast food chain was staged," the outlet's headline sneered.

The article was immediately mocked into oblivion by critics online.

"I’m gonna have to spend some time contemplating the possibility that this was not a completely organic event featuring a former president taking a side gig at a Pennsylvania McDonald’s while he’s running for president," replied commentator Mary Katharine Ham.

"Wait, you’re telling me that Trump didn’t fill out an application and organically start working at a PA McDonald’s where a film crew spontaneously showed up with SS vetted customers, he staged it all? It wasn’t for the $25 in wages??" responded blogger Courtney O'Dell.

"Dust off the mantle, the Pulitzer Prize is on the way," joked satirist David Burge.

"Woodward and Bernstein who? Looks like @Newsweek just wrapped up the Pulitzer for investigative journalism. Next up. Rumors Santa may not be real," said Barstool founder David Portnoy.

The photo op itself was designed to mock Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris for claiming without evidence that she once worked at a McDonald's.

"She never worked at McDonald's. It was a fake story," said Trump at a campaign rally. "It was a lie. She never worked at McDonald's over the hot french fries."

Newsweek ended an 80-year run as a print magazine with its last edition in 2012. It has only been available online since then.

Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!

'Extremist base will try to kill people': Left-wing outlets have repeatedly suggested Trump supporters will become violent



Despite multiple assassination attempts on former President Donald Trump, left-wing outlets have continuously suggested that Trump supporters would be the ones to turn to violence and even killings. They've even claimed that Trump has perpetuated this through violent rhetoric.

For years, pundits have done their best to predict a militant uprising by Trump supporters who would apparently find inspiration in the allegedly ever-present, threatening tone that he instills in them at rallies and press conferences.

Some of the worst offenders included blunt messaging that some Trump supporters were "highly likely" to commit murders due to Trump's rhetoric.

'Trump Is Okay with Political Violence (by His Supporters).'

University professor Brian Klaas appeared on MSNBC in October 2023 and said that Trump had been "saying things that could get people killed" so often that he had brought "normalcy" to it.

"What is highly likely going into the 2024 election is that a small subset of Trump's very well-armed and extremist base will try to kill people," Klaas told a panel.

He added that Trump is guilty of "crazy incitement to violence."

Following the second attempt on Trump's life, Klaas said on X that "political violence is abhorrent" but also that Trump "remains a serious threat to American democracy."

— (@)

CNN said in 2020 that Trump supporters could be "incited to future violence" by Trump's continued promotion of "2020 election lies."

At the time, federal judges and prosecutors from the Justice Department were pushing this expectation of violence from Trump supporters, citing the threat of "disinformation" being used to radicalize them.

In August 2022, the Atlantic claimed that Trump supporters had used violence to support him, with the "bad news" being that many other of Trump's "armchair revolutionaries'" were sincere in their violent rhetoric.

The outlet also stated that the "dark talk" from Trumpers was intended to intimidate those who were investigating Trump's "many abuses of power" and galvanize and organize his "true believers."

These believers, of course, were predicted to commit violence in his name.

In August 2024, outlet the Bulwark published a piece titled "Trump Is Okay with Political Violence (by His Supporters)."

The website, which describes itself as "honest news" in "good faith," said that Trump refused to condemn political violence committed by his supporters.

The article went on to state that not only does Trump not accept jury verdicts against himself, he doesn't accept them against his supporters — who were referred to as "thugs" — either.

There also exists a "Trump Hate Map" published by America's Voice. The page has the goal of mapping the locations of any hate crime that could possibly be connected to Trump in any way.

"We’ve seen the proof since his campaign launch in June 2015," the website reads.

Often using the backdrop of January 6 as their hidden ace, these hopeful predictions of violence typically ignore the George Floyd riots in 2020 that resulted in 19 deaths and billions in property damage. They also failed to recognize CHOP and CHAZ, the short-lived communist occupied zones in Seattle and Washington, D.C., that featured the firebombing of police stations.

Also forgotten are the many statues and monuments torn down by leftist protesters, as well as the fires set near the White House, including the Church of the Presidents.

Accusations against Trump supporters are measured by the lowest bar possible, while left-wing violence seemingly is not measured at all.

With now two attempts on Trump's life, it should be noted that taking shots at the former leader of the country and candidate for president barely hits the radar for many.

Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!

Fact-checkers beclown themselves covering Trump's thunderous town hall. Here's the worst in show.



President Donald Trump joined Sean Hannity Wednesday evening for a town hall interview in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania — a state where Trump appears now to be eking out a slim advantage in the polls.

While the Republican set out a bold vision for international peace and American prosperity, self-described fact-checkers worked furiously to cast doubt on virtually every sentence Trump uttered.

In the case of the Poynter Institute's PolitiFact, this meant fine-tuning the definition of "coup" and suggesting that American presidents can't actually prevent or stop wars.

Broad strokes

Trump hammered Kamala Harris on her record, over the "coup" that resulted in her becoming the Democratic presidential nominee, and on her reluctance to engage meaningfully with the fourth estate.

Hannity, too, had some fun at Harris' expense, pretending to end the interview after roughly 16 minutes — a gibe over the brevity of Harris' softball interview last week with CNN's Dana Bash, which was the vice president's first interview following several weeks spent dodging questions and the press.

Although Trump's frequent barbs resonated with the thousands of audience members who had gathered for the event and whose energy ostensibly made Hannity's job at times difficult, the president also made the case for why his re-election would bode well for the commonwealth and the country at large.

Meanwhile, fact-checkers were projecting error from afar.

Peace is impossible, apparently

At the outset, Trump characterized the world as "sick and angry" and vowed to "heal" it — in part by "get[ting] rid of all these wars that are starting all over the place because of incompetent American leadership."

Trump reiterated that the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas terrorist attacks on Israel and the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine "would have never happened" had he been office — repeatedly referencing Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán's recent suggestion that Trump was effectively an antidote to the prevailing chaos, particularly in Eastern Europe.

Orbán told Politico's parent company Axel Springer in July that Trump "is the man of peace. Under his four-year term he did not initiate a single war, and he did a lot in order to create peace in old conflicts in very complicated areas of the world."

After noting Wednesday that he went "four years without any blowups," Trump suggested to Hannity that his leadership now might be the difference between nuclear holocaust and relative peace.

Trump said, "We're heading into World War III territory," indicating this is all the more troubling "because of the power of weapons — nuclear weapons in particular, but other weapons also, and I know the weapons better than anybody because I'm the one who bought them."

"You need a president that's not going to be taking you into war. We won't have World War III when I'm elected, but with these clowns that you have in there now, you're going to end up having World War III," continued the president. "It's going to be a war like no other."

The Poynter Institute's PolitiFact, among the many liberal outfits "fact-checking" Trump's remarks at the town hall, did its best to suggest that an American president cannot stop or prevent a war.

Seizing upon Trump's suggestion that he would "heal our world" and address the wars "starting all over the place," PolitFact's Louis Jacobson claimed that supposed experts told him "there's a limit to how much influence U.S. presidents have over whether a foreign conflict erupts into war."

Jacobson shared a quote from Richard Betts, a Columbia University professor emeritus of war and peace studies, stating, "American presidents have scant control over foreign decisions about war and peace unless they show their willingness to commit American power."

Jacobson also quoted an associate political science professor from Muskingum University who suggested Trump would have been unable to prevent Russia's invasion of Ukraine "without simply selling out the Ukrainians and giving Putin what he wanted, or putting American armed forces in Ukraine."

Harris is not a communist, apparently

Trump criticized Harris, the daughter of a Marxist economist and advocate for "equality of outcome[s]," over her proposed wealth redistribution scheme and her presently vague economic agenda.

"This country will end up in a depression if she becomes president," Trump told Hannity. "Like 1929, this will be a 1929 depression. She has no idea what the hell she's doing."

"I gave you the biggest tax cuts in the history of our country. If you let them. If you let the Trump tax cuts expire, which she wants to do, she wants to terminate them. If you do that, you will suffer the biggest tax increase in history. There's never been a tax increase like it, on top of which she wants to add a lot of tax," added Trump, referencing Harris' proposed 28% tax on long-term capital gains.

At one stage, Trump referred to his opponent as "Comrade Harris."

'Harris is neither a Marxist nor a Communist.'

In his recent interview with Lex Fridman, Trump explained why he has taken to characterizing Harris and other radicals as communists, noting that "she came out with price controls. ... It leads to communism. It leads to socialism. It leads to having no food on the shelves, and it leads to having tremendous inflation."

Trump is evidently not alone in thinking Harris' proposal is a little red. The Washington Post recently published an article titled, "When your opponent calls you 'communist,' maybe don't propose price controls?"

Nevertheless, PolitiFact's fact-checker Amy Sherman would not let the nickname stand.

Referencing her previous "fact-check," Sherman noted that "experts told us Harris is neither a Marxist nor a Communist. She is a capitalist."

Sherman added:

The Trump campaign has pointed to Harris' plan to ban price gouging by implementing price controls. That proposal is vague, but its scope falls far short of communist policy, which advocates a political system of government or a party that abolishes private property. Harris has not called for seizing private homes or businesses.

Trump campaign spokeswoman Caroline Sunshine previously told PolitiFact, "Kamala Harris has literally suggested price controls as a matter of economic policy."

"Would encourage you to inspect the well documented list of Marxist and communists who've suggested the same," added Sunshine.

A coup by another name

During the town hall, Trump criticized the way by which Harris became the Democratic nominee, noting that it was "very unfair."

Referencing the 2020 election, Trump said, "She ran against [Biden] in the primary. She got no votes, and she was the first to leave. ... He got 14 million votes [in 2024], and they threw him out."

"It was really a coup when you think about it," continued Trump. "And the woman who came in last, the person who came in last [became the nominee]."

PolitiFact's Amy Sherman and Jeff Cercone swooped in to reassure their readers that once again, Trump was mistaken.

"A coup d'etat is a French term that means the overthrow of a government, usually by illegal means and with the threat of violence," wrote the so-called fact-checkers. "Experts previously told PolitiFact that Democrats persuading President Joe Biden to drop out of the race for president doesn't meet that commonly used definition."

Merriam-Webster's dictionary defines a coup d'etat as "a sudden decisive exercise of force in politics."

The Online Etymology Dictionary defines it thusly:

1640s, from French coup d'étate, literally "stroke of the state" (see coup). Technically any sudden, decisive political act, especially an important and unexpected change in the form and methods of a government, but in 20c. popularly restricted to the overthrow of a government.

'The selection of Harris was done fully within Democratic Party rules.'

Whereas PolitFact has previously suggested that the Jan. 6, 2021, protests at the Capitol constituted a coup, it maintains that the Russia collusion hoax instigated by outgoing Obama officials and elements of the Democratic Party that was aimed, ostensibly, at kneecapping or removing Trump from office was not a coup nor was the pressure campaign to remove Biden as the Democratic candidate in this election.

Scott Althaus, director of the University of Illinois' Cline Center for Advanced Social Research's Coup D’etat Project, told PolitiFact that "to be considered a coup event, a resignation of a chief executive would need to be connected to threat or use of coercion or force that is illegal or extra-legal," adding, "Social pressure from fellow co-partisans fails to satisfy this criterion."

Fresh off embarrassing itself peddling false information about Tucker Carlson, Newsweek also engaged in a "fact-checking" exercise Wednesday evening. The blog stressed that:

Harris' ascension to the top of the ticket was not the result of a coup — political parties are allowed to select their own presidential candidates and the selection of Harris was done fully within Democratic Party rules.

Not border czar, apparently

After Hannity played a montage of Harris defending open-border policies and incentives for illegal immigration, he and Trump blasted the vice president over her shortcomings as America's "border czar" — a title and role PolitFact suggested was largely a thing of fiction.

Axios reported in April 2021, "Harris, appointed by Biden as border czar, said she would be looking at the 'root causes' that drive migration."

PolitiFact acknowledged that Harris was assigned "to work alongside officials in Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras to address the issues driving people to leave those countries and come to the United States" and that Harris emphasized her role months later when visiting El Paso, Texas.

Nevertheless, the fact-checking outfit concluded: "No, Harris wasn't put in charge of border enforcement."

While prickled by allusions to Harris' "border czar" role, PolitiFact's Maria Ramirez Uribe, a former race and equity reporter, appeared more concerned with Trump's suggestion that over 20 million illegal aliens have "poured into our country."

"There's never been a country that allowed 21 million people to come in over a three-year period," Trump told Hannity, apparently factoring in an estimate of the number of illegal aliens who have entered without encountering federal agents. "And 21 million people, many of whom are from prisons, many of whom are murderers and drug dealers. And child traffickers, and by the way, women traffickers."

According to U.S. Customs and Border Protection, at least 8.2 million illegal aliens stole across the southern border between January 2021 and July 2024. This figure does not account for the millions of "gotaways" who were not stopped or processed at the border.

It appears the liberal fact-checkers found a way to trip one another up.

Uribe, desperate to suggest Trump had overstated the number of illegal aliens pouring into the country under Harris' watch, suggested that:

During Biden's administration, immigration officials have encountered immigrants illegally crossing the U.S. border around 10 million times. When accounting for 'got aways' — people who aren't stopped by border officials — the number rises to about 11.6 million.

Citing PolitiFact, Newsweek then stated in its fact-check that:

Trump may have arrived at the 21 million figure due to a further 11.6 million people who were not stopped by officials at the border, although this figure is based on a subjective and unverified count and the true number of crossings is unclear.

According to Newsweek's interpretation, Trump would have been right on the money.

Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!

NYT Admits FBI Was Authorized To Use Lethal Force Against Trump, But Dubs The Claim A Lie Anyway

The NYT acknowledged that "lethal force could be employed" but characterized Trump's factual assertion about the raid as "blatantly false."

Tucker Slams Newsweek Smear As Scheme To Restart Government Surveillance

Carlson called the report of his launching a show in Russia "completely absurd," adding that he had "never even heard of this channel."

Carlson calls Newsweek's 'bull****' an attempt to 'give the Biden administration a pretext'



Newsweek joined the establishment media Tuesday in advancing falsehoods and smearing Tucker Carlson. Although the outlet has since updated its piece to reflect a disparate reality, it nevertheless maintained its insinuation that the populist commentator is deferential to the Russian regime.

Some older episodes of Tucker Carlson's show were translated for the benefit of East Slavs, then broadcast on a state-owned Russian news channel. This was done "without legal permission," according Dean Thompson, head of programming and production operations at the Tucker Carlson Network.

Newsweek beclowned itself, reframing this theft as a partnership.

Blaze News previously detailed how Newsweek's "senior news reporter" Brendan Cole falsely claimed that "the show is part of a joint project with Carlson TV, in which he will interview figures and politicians who have 'alternative views to the mainstream.'"

Cole had apparently taken the Russian government newspaper Rossiskya Gazyeta at its word and reportedly refrained from checking in with Carlson or his team.

Neil Patel, CEO of the Tucker Carlson Network, made clear that "the Tucker Carlson Network has not done any deals with state media in any country," adding that "whoever is currently pretending to be the old Newsweek brand would know that if they had checked with us before printing like news companies are supposed to do."

Newsweek's smear, packaged as an article entitled, "Tucker Carlson launches show on Russian state TV," garnered a great deal of attention and plenty of traction, serving to bolster some critics' biases in the U.S. and elsewhere.

The corresponding post on X garnered millions of impressions and hundreds of reposts, including by bloggers such as Bari Weiss as well as longtime Carlson critics like Julia Ioffe and "The Daily Show" correspondent Jordan Klepper.

'It's pretty dark.'

Even though the tweet has since been taken down and the article has been altered, the damage appears to have been done. Various blogs and publications — including the Kyiv-based Ukrainska Pravda — that ran with the claim have yet to provide corrections.

Some online exponents of Newsweek's false narrative, such as Heath Mayor of Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz, have even refused to cede the ground they believe they gained in the ongoing war on Tucker Carlson's character when confronted with the real story.

Tucker Carlson told Philip Melanchthon Wegmann of RealClear Politics, "Total bull**** in every way."

"Newsweek is very obviously trying to give the Biden administration a pretext to read my personal communications under FISA," continued Carlson. "It's pretty dark."

Biden recently ratified the bill reauthorizing Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, putting the government in a prime position to spy on Carlson — which may not be the first time.

Citing insights from "a whistleblower within the U.S. government," Carlson suggested in 2021 that the National Security Agency had "been monitoring our electronic communications and is planning to leak them in an effort to take [his Fox News] show off the air."

When pressed about the Newsweek report, Carlson told CNN's Hadas Gold, "It's all fake, obviously, like most stories in American news media. Of course I have no partnership with Russia. The first I'd heard anything about this was [this] morning."

Blaze News editor in chief Matthew Peterson responded, "It's important to note that this alarming incident appears to be more than 'fake news' — as if that wasn't bad enough — but a deliberate attack on Tucker Carlson and his media business."

"Newsweek, as is so much of the media today, is a pawn in a much larger game. It is clear that some in the federal government want to surveil him, if they don't already, because of his dissenting political views. This is dangerous stuff. Honest media outlets cannot continue allow this sort of thing to keep happening. We must work together to fight back," added Peterson.

Journalist Glenn Greenwald, host of "System Update," noted, "This original Newsweek headline predictably went viral, claiming Tucker Carlson has 'launched' a new program on Russia state TV. The 'edited' article now makes clear the whole story is bull**** — false — but it was an irresistible McCarthyite smear."

— (@)

This is not the first time Carlson has been accused of collaborating with Russian state television to broadcast his show. The BBC's Francis Scarr spotted an ad for the Russian translation of Carlson's program, noting in September, "Russian state TV's rolling news channel Rossiya 24 seems to say that Tucker Carlson has landed himself a new job there."

In the face of a similar wave of outrage and ridicule, Carlson told the Financial Times' Max Seddon, "I have no idea what you're talking about. I've never heard of this, or the channel. Of course I'm not hosting a show on Russian television. That's absurd. Please."

"More Russia-related bull****. There's so much I can't keep up," added Carlson.

Blaze News has reached out to Dean Thompson for further comment and will update this article in the event of a response.

Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!

The truth comes out after legacy media outlet claims Tucker Carlson 'launches' show on Russian-state TV: 'Totally false'



Tucker Carlson is not launching a show on Russian-state television.

On Tuesday, Newsweek published a story claiming that Carlson had launched a show on Russia 24, a state-controlled Russian media outlet. Newsweek cited a newspaper owned and controlled by the Russian government as its source.

'It's all fake obviously, like most stories in American news media.'

"Tucker Carlson launches show on Russian state TV," Newsweek wrote on X.

The story quickly spread online, leading to accusations that Carlson is now "quite literally, a mouthpiece of the Russian state" and that Carlson "has now embraced his master," a reference to Russian President Vladimir Putin.

But it's not true: Carlson has not launched a show with Russia 24.

"That Newsweek story is totally false," Dean Thompson, head of programming and production operations at the Tucker Carlson Network, told Blaze News.

What is true is that Russia 24 is airing old episodes of Carlson's show that include Russian translation. Thompson explained that "use of our content by that channel is without legal permission."

Neil Patel, CEO of the Tucker Carlson Network, added in a statement:

The Tucker Carlson Network has not done any deals with state media in any country. Whoever is currently pretending to be the old Newsweek brand would know that if they had checked with us before printing like news companies are supposed to do.

Carlson, meanwhile, said, "It's all fake obviously, like most stories in American news media. Of course I have no partnership with Russia. The first I'd heard anything about this was (this) morning."

This is the second time that Newsweek has tried to connect Carlson to Russian-state TV. The outlet published a story last September suggesting Carlson had partnered with Russian-state TV. It was not true then, and it's not true now.

The false claim appears to have originated from Ukraine’s Institute of Mass Information and Ukraine Pravda.

It's not clear why the media keep pushing an already-debunked story to smear Carlson. One theory posits the false claims can serve as a pretext to justify government surveillance of Carlson.

Debunked stories like this (see @NeilPatelTDC’s post explaining that the story is fake) are often used by political leaders to get the intelligence services to spy on their adversaries (in this case, pro-Trump conservatives).

Here’s how it happens:

1/8 https://t.co/OyrH2Gtayj
— joshua steinman (🇺🇸,🇺🇸) (@JoshuaSteinman) May 21, 2024

Newsweek has since updated and corrected its story.

Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!

Democrats Project Their Election Interference Onto The Supreme Court And Everyone Else

When the Supreme Court smacks down Democrats' election interference, Democrats claim the courts are a threat to democracy.