FRIDAY: The gentleman's latest Truth Social post!

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2026

Like gunshots on Fifth Avenue? The Truth Social post has been deleted. But you can still see it, just as it was, at the Wayback Machine.

With apologiesat Mediate, the original report started like this:

Trump Posts Video Depicting Barack and Michelle Obama as Apes

President Donald Trump shared a 2020 election conspiracy video to Truth Social on Thursday night that briefly depicts former President Barack Obama and former First Lady Michelle Obama as apes.

And so on from there. It's in that report that we saw the link to the original Truth Social post.

By now, the original post has been deleted. First, though, and again with sorrow, the cosmos was offered this:

White House Shrugs Off ‘Fake Outrage’ Over Trump Post Depicting Obamas as Apes

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt has dismissed criticism of President Donald Trump for having shared an AI-generated video on Truth Social depicting former President Barack Obama and former First Lady Michelle Obama as apes.

[...]

Responding on Friday, Leavitt defended the post in comment to PBS and said the controversial clip was from a meme that had depicted Trump as “King of the Jungle” over other lawmakers:

"This is from an Internet meme video depicting President Trump as the King of the Jungle and Democrats as characters from ‘The Lion King.' Please stop the fake outrage and report on something today that actually matters to the American public."

And so on from there. At this point, we may even feel sorry for the routinely astonishing Leavitt. Our main question about her remains unchanged:
How does a person get to be the way she was by the time she was just 25?
How did she get to be that way? We do feel sure that she could do better.

The president once said that he could shoot someone on Fifth Avenue and no major harm would be done to him within his political world. It's also true that Blue America's major news orgs have worked hard, for the past many years, to refuse to see the unfortunate, dangerous state of affairs which has been sitting right there before them.

We'll be watching Fox & Friends Weekend tomorrow morning. Presumably, all three friends will be presentCharlie and Rachel and Griff.

As you know, we always watch that "cable news" show. We'll start watching at 6 o'clock sharp.

SONG(S) SUNG BLUE: When Martinez described her seven wounds...

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2026

...she was widely disappeared: Marimar Martinez, 30 years old, was born right there in Chicago.

Today, she's a preschool teacher at a Montessori school. She speaks lightly accented Englishbut then again, who doesn't?

(Who isn't speaking "accented English?" Kate Winslet? Jennifer Lawrence?)

This past Tuesday, Martinez was a featured witness on Capitol Hill at a form staged by Democratic Party officeholders. As you can see by clicking here, C-Span summarizes its 22-minute videotape of her testimony in the (slightly comical) manner shown:

February 3, 2026
U.S. Citizen Recounts Being Shot Five Times by Border Patrol Agents in Chicago

Marimar Martinez, 30, a U.S. citizen and resident of Chicago, says she was shot by Customs and Border Patrol agents five times during an attempted traffic stop. During a public forum organized by congressional Democrats, she says, "I felt the bullets continue to pierce my body". She says she is thankful she survived her "attempted murder" by a Border Patrol agent so she can tell her story.

C-Span is playing it safe! Martinez says she was shot five times? That's what the invaluable news org says.

In all honesty, no one disputes the fact that Martinez was shot five times. As we noted yesterday, the federal agent who shot her five times soon seemed to be bragging about that fact in a brace of gruesome text messages.

To its credit, NBC News reported that fact in January. Here's the relevant part of the report in question:

Judge dismisses charges against Chicago woman shot by Border Patrol

[...]

The motion to dismiss comes after it was revealed last week at a court hearing that the Customs and Border Protection agent who shot Martinez multiple times had bragged about it in messages to other officers.

According to Reuters, records presented at the hearing showed that in a group Signal chat with other agents, Exum wrote: “I fired 5 rounds and she had 7 holes. Put that in your book boys.”

In a message to another recipient, Exum sent a news article about the event followed by the message: “Read it. 5 shots, 7 holes,” Reuters reported.

Christopher Parente, an attorney for Martinez, asked the agent what he meant by those messages. According to records presented earlier this month at a hearing against her, Exum responded: “I’m a firearms instructor and I take pride in my shooting skills.”

As we noted yesterday, Michelle Goldberg referred to Exum's "giddy sadism" in this instructive column for the New York Times. We can't say that her diagnosis is wrong, but we also can't say that it's right. We'll assume she was speaking colloquially.

(According to the leading authority on the topic, the term "sadistic personality disorder" no longer exists in the DSM as a clinical diagnosis. At any rate, our journalists have agreed that such matters must never be discussed within the nation's political discourse.)

Martinez, who was shot five times, was a featured witness at Tuesday's congressional forum. Unless you subscribe to the New York Times, in which case you were limited to this account of what was said at that timely event:

Renee Good’s Brothers Call on Congress to Rein In Immigration Crackdown

Nearly one month after a federal immigration agent shot and killed Renee Good, 37, in Minneapolis, two of her siblings, Brent and Luke Ganger, appeared on Capitol Hill on Tuesday and urged lawmakers to move to rein in the deportation crackdown.

“In the last few weeks, our family took some consolation thinking that perhaps Nee’s death would bring about change in our country,” Luke Ganger told members of Congress, using a nickname for his sister. “And it has not.”

Reading from the eulogy he said he had given for his sister days earlier, Brent Ganger called Ms. Good “unapologetically hopeful.” Choking back tears as he described Ms. Good as a devoted mother, he likened his sister to a dandelion.

“They keep coming back stronger, brighter, spreading seeds of hope everywhere they land,” he said.

Ms. Good’s brothers spoke at a public forum held by congressional Democrats, which was focused on the use of force by federal agents conducting the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown.

That's the way the news report began. It continued from there at some length. 

The testimony by Renee Good's brothers was a major part of the forum. As for Martinez, her ordeal was also mentionedbut not until the news report's final paragraph:

Mr. Pretti’s relatives did not speak at the forum, but Democrats invoked his death as they argued that federal immigration agents needed to operate with stricter limits.

“Congress has a responsibility to step in when constitutional rights are being violated,” said Mr. Garcia, the top Democrat on the House Oversight Committee.

The Democrats also heard testimony from Antonio Romanucci, a lawyer representing Ms. Good’s family, and a number of American citizens who described violent encounters with immigration officials.

So there! Martinez was one of that "number of American citizens who described violent encounters with immigration officials." That said, you're looking at the way the very end of the Times report. 

Martinez's name was never mentioned in the Times report. Indeed, the highly accommodationist Times came that close to totally leaving her out.

We've repeatedly mentioned the way the New York Times tends to disappear the most disturbing phenomena involving the sitting president. To our reckoning, this lengthy but highly circumscribed news report tends to fit that pattern. 

At present, the New York Times is powering ahead on the national scene. By way of contrast, the once great Washington Post seems to perhaps be dying. 

That said:

As usual, the struggling Post did a better job reporting Tuesday's forum. The Washington Post managed to acknowledge Martinezand two more "others"right there in its headline. But it also did so, right from the jump, in the body of its report:

RenĂ©e Good’s brothers, others describe assaults, shootings at hearing

American citizens told congressional leaders Tuesday that they had been shot, manhandled and dragged from their cars by aggressive federal immigration enforcement agents in recent months, experiences that left them fearing for their lives.

The witnesses wept and spoke with emotion as they described violent encounters with federal agents at a forum on Capitol Hill sponsored by two Democrats. Some said they were protesting when they encountered immigration agents. Others told lawmakers they were innocent bystanders.

“I struggle every day with the pain and the suffering,” said Marimar Martinez, 30, who was shot five times by a federal agent after following U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents and blowing her car horn to warn neighbors of a potential raid in Chicago last fall. She was charged with assaulting the officer who shot her — but the charge was later dropped.

There was one moment, she recounted, that she looked down at blood streaming from poorly bandaged gunshot wounds and feared she might die.

[...]

On Tuesday, lawmakers also heard from Aliya Rahman, a traumatic brain injury survivor who said she was dragged from her car by agents in January, and Martin Daniel Rascon, who was shot at by agents in California in August.

Rahman, a Bangladeshi American software engineer, described becoming ensnared in a traffic jam of ICE vehicles while driving to a doctor’s appointment in Minneapolis on Jan. 13. Agents asked her to move her vehicle then shattered her car window and dragged her from the vehicle before taking her into custody, she said.

“I yelled, ‘I’m disabled,’” she said. “And the agent said, ‘Too late.’”

She said once she was taken to the Whipple Federal Building—where hundreds of immigrants have been detained—agents ignored her protestations that she had a brain injury. She repeatedly asked for medical care before finally blacking out. She was ultimately taken to a local hospital to be treated, she said.

Several weeks ago, in real time, we asked what ended up happening to Rahman. On Tuesday, her account of her treatment was horrifyingand yes, she had been on her way to a medical appointment when she was dragged from her car and subjected to a horrific manhandling.

(She still can't lift her arms normally, she said at Tuesday's forum.)

The Post's report barely scratched the surface of what Rahman said. But to the credit of the Post's news division, the testimony of Aliya Rahman, 43 years old, wasn't wholly disappeared.

The fatal shootings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti have brought this general topic center stage in the American public discourse. You'd almost think the horrific stories told by Martinez, Rahman and Rascon would have been a matter of high public interest.

Presumably, that's what congressional Democrats thought when they organized this forum. But in its oatmeal-adjacent news report about the Tuesday event, the New York Times ran off and hid.

Tuesday evening, Lawrence O'Donnell didn't.

Elsewhere in Blue America, "cable news" hosts largely went through the motions. Below, we show you the pittance Anderson Cooper dropped into the cup of public awareness on his CNN program that night:

COOPER (2/3/25): Powerful testimony on Capitol Hill today by the brothers of Renee Good, the 37-year-old mom who was shot to death by an ice officer in Minneapolis nearly one month ago. Here's some of what Luke and Brent Gang Ganger told lawmakers.

LUKE GANGER (videotape): The prayers and words of support have truly brought us comfort, and it is meaningful that these sentiments have come from people of all colors, faiths and ideals. That is a perfect reflection of Renee.

BRENT GANGER (videotape): When I think of Renee, I think of dandelions and sunlight. Dandelions don't ask permission to grow. They push through cracks in the sidewalk, through hard soil, through places where you don't expect beauty. And suddenly there they are bright, alive.

COOPER: Also testifying today was Aliya Rahman, who was violently pulled out of her car by ICE agents in Minneapolis last month. It's hard to forget those images just a couple of blocks from where Renee Good was killed. She tried to tell officers she was disabled.

She has autism and a traumatic brain injury and was on her way to a medical appointment when they cut the seatbelt strap to grab her. She was detained, but says she was never told she was under arrest, never read her rights, never charged with a crime.

RAHMAN (videotape): I received no medical screening, phone call or access to a lawyer. I was denied a communication navigator when my speech began to slur. Agents laughed as I tried to immobilize my own neck.

I asked for my cane and was told no. Pulled up by my arms and prodded forward in leg irons by agents laughing and saying, "Walk! You can do it, walk!"

COOPER: She also testified that she ended up in an emergency room after that experience.

In fairness, brief videotape of Rahman's testimony was offered. Martinez wasn't mentioned. Neither was Charles Exum. 

For the record, this brief report came very late in Cooper's hourlong program. Like almost everyone else, he threw Martinez under a bus so he could focus on a "true crime" drama involving the mother of a high=end press corps colleague.

By our reckoning, Cooper took a bit of a dive on Tuesday night, as is his channel's wont. Lawrence O'Donnell didn't. 

In our view, O'Donnell won a Pulitzer Prize with his angry presentation of what was said at that forum. If only his corporate owners were able to see how strong his performance was!

O'Donnell's performance wasn't perfect. No presentation of a news event ever isand O'Donnell's undisguised loathing of President Trump sometimes undermines his journalistic performance.

But on this Tuesday night, O'Donnell reacted much as a sensible, sane person should. If only his owners were able to see how strong his performance was!

Those owners have made no attempt to call attention to O'Donnell's performance. In a similarly embarrassing way, no one at Mediaite reported on O'Donnell's presentation.

Over at the Last Word site, you can see the first ten minutesand nothing moreof O'Donnell's lengthy opening segment. He opened his program with two major chunks of the testimony of Martinez. Included was her denunciation of the colloquially sadistic text messages Exum sent.

If you want to see that first ten minutes, you can click to go to the Last Word site. Once there, you must click again on the "Latest Video" entry bearing this capsule description:

Lawrence: No Republicans show up as victims of Trump-encouraged ICE shootings testify

No Republicans showed up? Neither did the New York Times, or Anderson Cooper, or even O'Donnell's corporate owners. At such times, we routinely self-impressed humans may learn who we actually are, in all our variety and given our imperfections.

Even here in Blue America, we aren't the people we often seem to think we are. That's especially true of the corporate ownership types who parcel out what we can see and what we can hear when we visit our most trusted news orgs.

In our view, O'Donnell won a Pulitzer Prize that night. Elsewhere, the public discourse was the biggest loser.

Martinez and Rahman told stories that day which were horrifying but also highly instructive. Given the public concern created by the fatal shooting of Good and Pretti, you'd think the stories told at that forum would have major news value.

No transcripts of what was said that day were created. We ourselves have barely scratched the surface of what Martinez and the two others said.

To appearances, congressional Democrats had tried to fashion a song sung Blue when they presented that forum. For reasons they won't be asked about, major news orgs disappeared the harrowing, highly topical stories the public needs to hear.

For extra credit only: One final point:

Over on the Fox News Channel, has that forum ever been mentioned at all? We'll try to research that point.

As we noted on Wednesday afternoon, Fox viewers were told the latest about Joy Behar. this week They were so informed by someone who strikes us as sadly and weirdly disordered. But were they ever exposed to a single word of what Martinez said?


THURSDAY: When Martinez told her story this week...

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2026

...the glorious Times took a pass: It's amazing to see how little the American public has been told about Charles Exum.

As best we can tell from the paper's search engine, Exum's behavior in Chicago last year has never been the subject of a New York Times news report. On January 11, his conduct was briefly described by Michelle Goldberg, in this informative opinion column. 

What follows is the sum total of what an avid Times reader has likely read about Exum's behavior. Warning! In this short account, Goldberg seems to have misstated several points concerning what Exum did

By Killing Renee Good, ICE Sent a Message to Us All

[...]

It’s entirely possible that had [Renee] Good lived, the Trump administration might have tried to prosecute her. That’s essentially what happened to Marimar Martinez, a U.S. citizen in Chicago, in October. Martinez was in her car trying to warn people about ICE when she collided with a Border Patrol vehicle. Federal officials claimed she “rammed” a car driven by the agent Charles Exum, while her lawyers say he sideswiped her. Exum then got out of his car and shot her five times.

Martinez survived, only for the Justice Department to charge her with assaulting a federal officer. Her lawyers soon discovered that Exum had been boasting about the shooting in text messages. In one, he wrote, “I fired 5 rounds, and she had 7 holes. Put that in your book boys.” In another, he said, “Sweet. My fifteen mins of fame. Lmao.” The Justice Department ended up dropping the case before even more messages could be revealed.

Exum’s giddy sadism shouldn’t have been surprising; it reflects the culture the administration is encouraging among its immigration enforcers. In one ICE recruiting ad, an agent mans a mounted gun atop some sort of militarized vehicle, with the words, “Destroy the flood.” It was a reference to the video game Halo, where players must kill hostile space aliens. Another shows sword-wielding knights with the words, “The enemies are at the gates.”

Back in October, up in Chicago, Exum shot Marimar Martinez. In fact, he shot her five times, producing seven separate bullet holesseven separate wounds. 

Goldberg correctly said that federal officials had initially accused Martinex of "ramming" Exum's car. Let the record also show this:

In a fleeting reference to this incident in a "Visual Investigations" piece, a team of Times reporters said that Exum later testified that no "ramming" had occurred. He said the "collision" in question had in fact been "side to side."

Also this:

Back in real time, the struggling Washington Post devoted more attention to this remarkable incident than did the more glorious Times. In this news report"Federal judge dismisses case against Chicago woman shot by Border Patrol"the Post reported that Martinez had also been charged with attempted murder, not just with "assaulting a federal officer."

In November, the government dropped all charges. No explanations provided!

All in all, whatever! In her column, Goldberg referred to Exum's "giddy sadism," and there seems to be no doubthe did send those giddy text messages, in which he did in fact seem to boast about shooting Martinez five times, producing the seven bullet holes about which he seemed to be boasting.

On Tuesday, Martinez, who is 30 years old, told this story from her point of view, right there in Washington, D.C., "at a public forum held by congressional Democrats." Her astonishing story was ignored by the Times in this brief report about that forum

Once again, the Washington Post outperformed the Times in its own report about this Tuesday's forum.

As part of our struggling nation's lore, "Frankie she shot Albertshe shot him three or four times." In this more recent American incident, Exum shot Martinez a full five timesand the federal government then walked away from the apparently bogus charges it had initially filed.

Even after what has happened in Minneapolis, our greatest Blue American newspaper took a pass on Martinez's story in this week's news report. Lawrence O'Donnell made no such mistake. More on that tomorrow.

To our eye, O'Donnell won the Pulitzer Prize Tuesday night. Last night, sad to say, the gentleman gave it back.

Frankie she shot Albert: To hear Mike Seeger tell this story, you can just click here. His telling begins in the time-honored way:

"Frankie was a good girleverybody knows."

SONG(S) SUNG BLUE: When Bouie pictured Trump's Waterloo...

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2026

...French said, Not so fast: European literature is said to begin with the war poem known as the Iliad. Midway through the ancient text, Achilles is sulking in his tents, down along the shore.

Insulted by Agamemnon, Achilles is refusing to participate in the Achaeans' attempt to sack Troy. Odysseus is sent to win this mightiest warrior back.

It's a sobering assignment. In translation, we moderns are told this:

"Ajax and Odysseus made their way at once where the battle lines of breakers crash and drag, praying hard to the god who moves and shakes the earth that they might bring the proud heart of Achilles round with speed and ease." 

No one is eager to confront this mighty warrior's rage. But when they arrive at Achilles' tents, this is what they find:

Reaching the Myrmidon shelters and their ships,
they found him there, delighting his heart now,
plucking strong and clear on the fine lyre

beautifully carved, its silver bridge set firm—
he won from the spoils when he razed Eetion's city.
Achilles was lifting his spirits with it now,
singing the famous deeds of fighting heroes.
Across from him Patroclus sat alone, in silence,
waiting for Aeacus' son to finish with his song.

As beloved Patroclus looks on, mighty Achilles is lifting his spirits by singing a tribal song! This was all happening down by the shore, "where the breakers crash and drag."

Over this past weekend, it may have been a bit like that at the New York Times. In his new column for the Times, Jamelle Bouie almost seemed to be singing a (familiar) song sung Blue:

Minneapolis May Be Trump’s Gettysburg

That was the headline on Bouie's column. A separate column by Ezra Klein seemed to suggest this same pleasing notion:

The misbehavior of federal troops in Minnesota might be this president's Gettysburgperhaps even his Waterloo!

We Blues have sung this song again and again, dating all the way back to 2015. In June of that year, Candidate Trump's peculiar remarks about John McCain were going to bring his campaign to an end. 

Later, we heard the same claim about the crude remarks the fellow had offered on the Access Hollywood videotape.

Eleven years later, we Blues almost seem to be singing that same song all over again. But at that very same New York Times, David French had a different view.

David French is nobody's fool. His personal history isn't Blue, but he's thoroughly NeverTrump.

His new column poses a terrible warninga warning worthy of Cassandra, daughter of Troy's King Priam. Headline included, his column starts like this:

This Is Not a Drill

It’s only February, and the November elections are already in peril.

When I think back to the days and weeks before Jan. 6, 2021, one thing that’s clear is that many of us suffered from a failure of imagination. We knew President Trump’s lies and conspiracy mongering were dangerous, but it’s hard to think of a single person who predicted that a MAGA mob would storm the Capitol.

Very few people anticipated the sheer scale and scope of the effort to overturn the election or that an incredible 147 Republicans would vote not to certify Joe Biden’s clear and unambiguous presidential victory. We did not realize that they would go along with something that plainly corrupt and dangerous.

We must not make that mistake again.

Bouie was picturing a Waterloobut French was aggressively saying this:

Fellow scribe, not so fast!

November's elections "are already in peril," French said at the start of his column. In the handful of days since his column appeared, his warning has emerged as prophetic.

What the Hellespont was the columnist talking about? Given the president's declining approval ratings, how could the indolent forces of Blue America fail to win the day in November's elections?

How could we fail to win back the House? Based on a bit of extremely strange recent conduct, French proceeded to lay it out. Eventually, he imagined this state of play as this year's elections draw near:

[T]his is not a normal election year.

Now, in October, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, which rapidly expanded throughout the year, is running large-scale operations in Democratic-controlled cities. Hundreds if not thousands more American citizens have been caught in the dragnet. So have thousands of lawful residents.

Citizens, lawful residents and undocumented immigrants alike have been shackled and transported to brutal detention facilities in Texas and Florida.

Despite repeated court orders holding that federal officials cannot stop, much less detain, anyone purely on the basis of perceived ethnicity, the stops are still happening on a daily basis in cities across the United States.

That's the way it will be, French prophesies, by the time of November's elections. In his column, he pictures a state of play in which nonwhite citizens are afraid to go the polls because the polls are under federal guard. 

He offers much more detail in his dystopian musing. Along the way, he says this:

"The horrifying thing about our current moment is that not a single aspect of the scenario above is far-fetched. In fact, some of it is already happening."

Question:

Can something like that actually happen here? When French's column appeared, he cited the recent, extremely peculiar federal raid on the Fulton County election center, with Tulsi Gabbard on the scene, heroically directing the commander's federal troops. 

Massive volumes of records were carted off in support of the president's undying claim that he actually won the 2020 election. As French notes in his column, the sitting president is so delusional that he has even revived the lunatic "Italian satellite theory," according to which "Italian military satellites hacked the 2020 election."

Yes, that's correct. Even that!

Many observers were able to see the Fulton County raid as a threat to basic American process. That said, could French's detailed prophesy actually turn out to be true? 

Sadly, this:

In the handful of days since the column appeared, the president has angrily said that we ought to "nationalize" this year's elections. And then, Steve Bannon delivered the coup de grace on his WarRoom program.

As reported by Mediaite, here's what the gentleman said:

You’re damn right we’re gonna have ICE surround the polls come November. We’re not gonna sit here and allow you to steal the country again. And you can whine and cry and throw your toys out of the pram all you want, but we will never again allow an election to be stolen.

In this subsequent report, Politico records Bannon's further statements along these lines. Yesterday, the unusual fellow said this:
President Trump has to nationalize the election. You’ve got to put—not just, I think, ICE—you’ve got to call up the 82nd and 101st Airborne [Divisions] on the Insurrection Act. You’ve got to get around every poll and make sure only people with IDs, people … actually registered to vote and people that are United States citizens vote in this election
Could this actually happen here? Sadly, of course it could!

We've offered you reports about Bannon from Mediaite and Politico. We've done so for the following reason:

As best we can tell from the Times search engine, the New York Times, to this very minute, hasn't reported what Bannon has said.

In the end, Achilles abandoned his lyre and returned to the battle. We don't expect behavior like that from singers like Bouie and Klein.

We close for today with one final point:

As these disturbing events unfold, our major journalists still refuse to report and discuss the fairly obvious state of affairs which is sitting right there before them. 

A guild rule tells them that they mustn't ever discuss such obvious possibilities. Obedient to a fault, they sleepwalk into a frightening future, singing a familiar song sung Blue and thereby lifting our spirits.

Overthrows have happened before. All in all, in the end, we would offer this:

Our species wasn't built for this line of work. That fact has been proven before.

Tomorrow: Lawrence O'Donnell returns his prize

This afternoon: Who the Sam Hill is Charles Exum? Don't ask the New York Times!


WEDNESDAY: Unrecognizable falls off the wagon!

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2026

Behar a dog, he says: We don't watch Gutfeld! every night. Watching the show is a painful activity, but someone at one of our major news orgsNew York Times, come on down!should be monitoring this extremely strange, prime time "cable new" program on a nightly basis.

We don't watch every night. Still, we recently said it was our impression that the program's miscreant host had abandoned one of his most common practices:

We said it seemed that he had stopped comparing the female hosts of The View to cattle, horses, elephants and pigs, but also to whales and dogs and explicitly to "livestock."

On balance, Greg Gutfeld seems to possibly be some version of incel-adjacent. Without question, his routine conduct suggests a remarkably throwback loathing of womenan attitude many others would quickly describe as misogyny.

He surrounds himself with four-member panels of ideological stooges who experts sometimes describe as "Unrecognizables." Last evening, this was the lineup:

Gutfeld!: February 3, 2026
Tyrus: former professional "wrestler"
Emily Compagno: former head cheerleader, Oakland Raiders
Greg Gutfeld: host
Joe Machi: well-intentioned comedian
Katie Miller: wife of Stephen Miller

No, we aren't making that up. The previous night, the collection may have been worse:

Gutfeld!: February 2, 2026
Tyrus: former professional "wrestler"
Emily Compagno: perpetually furious fast-talker
Greg Gutfeld: 61-year old host
Michael Malice: that's the pen name he has chosen
Dave Landau: comedian

In fairness to major Blue American orgs, it would be hard to provide a critique of what occurs on this extremely peculiar program. 

On the other hand, the program's fatuous topic selection, mixed with its D-minus level of political analysis and the fury with which its panelists express their perfectly choreographed views, makes it a fascinating sample of the moral and intellectual life which seems be animate some part of the ongoing MAGA revolt.

If we were to characterize the program's content, we'd focus on its increasingly mega-BEEPed language, mixed with its undisguised apparent misogyny. We'd also offer this note:

There are plenty of fully legitimate Red American complaints concerning the recent conduct of Blue America. For example, discussions on The View are often less than idealbut Greg Gutfeld focuses exclusively on the claim that the show's five female co-hosts are too ugly and too fat, and that they therefore make him think of cattle and dogs.

There are plenty of fully legitimate complaints about the conduct of Blue America. Gutfeld! is marked by the expletive-laden, dimwitted way its participants pretend to explore them.

Long story short:

Last night, the program's perpetually furious, poop-obsessed host finally fell off the wagon! At 10:01, one minute inthat would be 7:01 on the coasthe offered this as the third of his short collection of opening jokes:

GUTFELD (2/3/26): Pharmaceutical companies are developing an Ozempic appetite suppression drug for dogs

And it's testing wellJoy Behar has completely stopped eating her own poop.

AUDIENCE: [Cheers, applause]

Yes, that's what this idiot said. Of course, as soon as he said "appetite" and "dogs," everyone knew where the corporate nut-ball was going. 

The reference to poop was an extra. On major Fox News Channel programs, everyone else is paid to pretend that this nut-ball's behavior makes sense.

The program went downhill after that. Monday's program may have been even uglier and dumber, but as of 10:01 last night, there he had gone again!

This very strange person is 61 years of age! Which is stranger:

The fact that he and his followers comport themselves this way every weekday night? Or the fact that no major news org in Blue America has ever tried to publish an accurate account of the very strange behavior offered each night on this, the third most-watched "cable news" program in our rapidly failing nation?

We suspected his owner had told him to stop. Last night, the fellow broke loose.


SONG(S) SUNG BLUE: O'Donnell wins the Pulitzer Prize!

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2026

Also, the president's Waterloo: Last evening, starting at 10 o'clock, Lawrence O'Donnel spent an hour winning the Pulitzer Prize.

We refer to the Pulitzer Prize for Not Being Asleep at The Wheel While Being Powder Blue. Before we describe O'Donnell's performance, let's return to one of the columns which appeared, over the weekend, at the New York Times.

As we noted in Monday's report, we thought we heard a familiar song as we read a few of those columns. In one column, Jamelle Bouie seemed to be dreaming a pleasant dream about a certain president's recent drop in the polls.

"Minneapolis May Be Trump’s Gettysburg," the headline on the column said. The president's current decline may be his Gettysburgperhaps even his Waterloo!

We thought we heard a familiar old song sung Blue. We thought we possibly heard that same song in the new column by Ezra Klein.

"Trump Has Overwhelmed Himself," the headline said on that column

At this site, we recalled the way Candidate Trump had supposedly doomed himself with what he said about John McCain! Also, we recalled the way he had doomed himself with what he said to Billy Bush on that Access Hollywood videotape!

We Blues! We've been singing that song of easy escape since at least 2015. As we read those two columnseven as we read this guest essay by Ruth Ben-Ghiatwe thought we might be hearing the newest version of that same old tribal song.

(At one point, we even flashed on On The Beach, the four major stars 1959 film about the last few months of human life after a nuclear war. That's the danger we apparently saw in the revival of that pleasing old song.)

Will reaction to the fatal shooting of Michael Pretti prove to be the downfall of the sitting president? Everything is possible! 

Without question, that decline could point the way to victory by Democrats in this year's congressional elections. But what happens after that?

Before we consider O'Donnell's performance, let's turn to several striking comments in the three columns we've mentioned. We'll start with the column by Bouie, in which he offers this portrait of MAGA defeat:

Minneapolis May Be Trump’s Gettysburg

[...]

The result was a catastrophic defeat for the Confederacy. Lee lost the initiative and would spend the rest of the war fighting on the defensive, unable to wage another strategic campaign. The Confederacy would not win foreign recognition, leaving it helpless against a Union blockade. And even with the tremendous loss of life—the Union Army suffered more than 23,000 casualties over three days of battle—the Northern public would be reinvigorated by victory, ready to continue the fight.

ICE and C.B.P. still roam the streets, and Trump’s authoritarian aspirations have not dimmed. But surveying the wreckage of Operation Metro Surge—of this reactionary administration’s crushing defeat at the hands of another band of tenacious Northerners—it does look to me like MAGA’s Gettysburg.

Everything is possible (at least until it isn't)! That said, that sounds a bit like wishful thinking. We almost thought we heard the lilt of a very old tribal song.

Full disclosure!  Assuming our scheduled elections take place this fall, MAGA may well get crushedbut President Trump will remain in the Oval Office! And in her balanced, academic presentation, Professor Ben-Ghiat makes a significant claim:

History Shows Trump’s Worst Impulses May Backfire on Him

[...]

“I follow my instincts, and I am never wrong,” said the Italian Fascist dictator Mussolini, shortly before he invaded Ethiopia in 1935. That war and Italy’s ensuing occupation initially made him popular at home, further inflating his ego, but eventually contributed to the bankruptcy of the Italian state.

[...]

It is well documented that strongmen are at their most dangerous when they feel threatened. That is why, as popular discontent with the Trump administration’s actions deepens, Americans should brace for heightened militarized domestic repression and more imperialist aggression abroad.

"I am never wrong," Mussolini said. President Trump makes similar statements pretty much every day of the week.

Could a type of (clinically diagnosable) delusion be present when he makes such grandiose claims? We can't answer that question, but Ben-Ghiat makes a claim which we ourselves have suggested in the past:

Strongmen are at their most dangerous when they feel threatened!

If MAGA does get mauled this November, how might the sitting president react? It would be a peculiar type of Gettysburg which led our struggling nation to "heightened militarized domestic repression and more imperialist aggression abroad."

It seemed to uswe could be wrong!that Bouie wasn't recognizing the full sweep of the possibilities at this dangerous time. Meanwhile, Ezra Klein, like Bouie, is very smartbut we thought the highlighted assertion was flatly, baldly inaccurate:

Trump Has Overwhelmed Himself

[...]

This is a presidency that is, by any measure, failing. Trump is unpopular; his brutality and his tariffs have turned immigration and affordability, once among of his strongest issues, into liabilities. Trump’s opposition is increasingly united and mobilized; Democrats are besting Republicans in elections all across the country and disciplined, brave, beautiful protest movements have emerged in the cities ICE has sought to occupy.

From what planet does that assertion hail? By the apparent "measure" of the sitting president, his presidency isn't failing at all On the planet where he seems to live, his presidency continues to be a miraculous success. 

(Clinical) delusion being what it is, we ourselves don't doubt the possibility that the sitting president truly believes his claims about his astounding success. For example, we don't doubt the possibility that he really does believe that he won the 2020 election! 

Does he really believe such things? On this campus, we have no idea, in part because Klein and Bouie have joined the rest of the guild in agreeing that medical specialists must never be asked to share what they know about the workings of (diagnosable) "delusional disorder."

We Blues! When we sing our tribal songs, echoing Achilles of old, we agree that such possibilities must not impinge on our tribal pleasure. We'll suggest that you ponder this:

As you may know, "Song Sung Blue" was and is one of Neil Diamond's most popular songs. To see him perform it, click here.

(We remember our conversation, long ago, with our friend, the comedian [NAME WITHHELD], in which we savants agreedDiamond could sing any page in the phone book and make it sound profound. It's an amazing performance skilla skill of high persuasion.)

In his popular "Song Sung Blue," Diamond was talking about a different kind of blue song. But in his lyrics, one key phrase almost seems to ring a bell in the present day:

Song Sung Blue

[...]

Funny thing, but you can sing it with a cry in your voice
And before you know it you get to feeling good
You simply got no choice...

Before you know it, you get to feeling good! Seeking such a type of deliverance is a well-known human tendency. 

We still haven't mentioned the way O'Donnell won the Pulitzer Prize last night. Also, we haven't had time to comment on the pathetic omissions which can be ascribed to this morning's report in the New York Times:

Also, we haven't mentioned that other column from the New York Times, the column by David French. That column also appeared this weekend. Yesterday, it appeared in print editions of the Times.

Blue Americans won't get to "feelin' good" in the course of French's column. French says the signs are abundantly clearthe sitting president isn't planning to permit a normal set of congressional elections to take place this year.

French could always be wrong, of coursebut he could also be right. We recently read this nostrum somewhere:

Strongmen are at their most dangerous when they feel threatened.

Attention, Blues! Our journalistic elites have failed us every step of the way. That dates all the way back to the invention of the Whitewater pseudo-scandal (now long forgotten), followed by the twenty-month war against Candidate Gore.

That said, what happens in the mainstream press corps' guild stays inside the guildand every guild member knows he or she must abide by that rule. 

We thought we heard a song sung Blue. Is there any possible chance that we're being ill-served again?

Tomorrow: What Lawrence O'Donnell (and only O'Donnell) correctly and angrily did

This afternoon: Gutfeld, off the wagon

In our view, a brilliant self-portrait: We never were Neil Diamond fans. But has anyone ever defined himself more brilliantly, or more concisely, than he did right here?

I Am, I Said

[...]

Did you ever read about the frog
Who dreamed of being a king
And then became one?
Well except for the names
And a few other changes,
If you talk about me,
The story's the same one...

Wow! Translation, within the context of the song:

Today, I'm a giant star in L.A.but that's not who I actually am!