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💥 BREAKING NEWS: Trump ERUPTS After Jimmy Kimmel Exposes His Creepiest Air Force One Moment Yet ⚡.CT

Jimmy Kimmel did not hold back. What started as a late-night joke turned into one of the most brutal televised takedowns of both Donald Trump and his young press secretary, Karoline Leavitt — a takedown so explosive that even conservative outlets couldn’t figure out how to defend it.

The controversy ignited aboard Air Force One, when Trump — instead of praising Leavitt’s competence, professionalism, or communication skills — veered into one of the strangest, most inappropriate comments ever made by a president.

Asked about Leavitt’s job performance, Trump described her face and lips as “moving like a machine gun.” The reporters froze. The room went silent. And Jimmy Kimmel pounced.

Kimmel’s reaction captured what millions were thinking:
“Does the White House have HR…? Because this is not normal presidential behavior.”
It wasn’t just awkward — it was surreal.

Once again, Trump’s instinct wasn’t to talk policy, but appearance. Not leadership, but aesthetics. It was the kind of moment that instantly became late-night gold, and Kimmel wasted zero time digging deeper.

Because the “machine-gun lips” comment wasn’t the whole story — it was just the beginning.

Kimmel had already been roasting Leavitt for weeks, especially after learning she was the youngest press secretary in U.S. history… and married to a real-estate developer 32 years older than her.

The age gap alone became instant meme fuel. Even Fox News personalities joked about it. When Fox News is clowning your age difference, the situation has reached another level.

But the story turned darker when Kimmel connected the dots.

Trump is more than two decades older than Melania. He has made dozens of eyebrow-raising comments about women over the years, from female politicians to world leaders.

Now, he had hired a press secretary in a marriage that mirrors his own age dynamic — and was publicly commenting on her facial features on a presidential aircraft.

Kimmel framed it perfectly:

“Trump isn’t building an administration — he’s building a casting call for his own personal aesthetic.”

From there, the segment spiraled into even more uncomfortable territory.
Kimmel replayed Leavitt’s biggest blunders at the podium, including her bizarre claim that Trump once deployed the U.S. military to “turn on the water in California” during wildfire season — a statement so outlandish it made Sean Spicer look like a Pulitzer-winning journalist.

And then came the even bigger problem:
Leavitt defending a signature in a 2003 birthday book — allegedly Trump’s — even though she was five years old at the time and nowhere near the political orbit.

Trump initially denied ever drawing or signing anything of the sort… until dozens of nearly identical doodles surfaced online.

Kimmel hammered the contradiction:

“He says he didn’t draw it, and ten seconds later the internet finds 25 drawings. He can’t help himself!”

It wasn’t just Leavitt who looked foolish — it was the entire communications apparatus built around defending Trump at all costs.

The deeper Kimmel went, the more he exposed a pattern:
Trump makes an inappropriate remark → Leavitt defends it → Trump contradicts himself → Leavitt doubles down → the whole thing collapses publicly → Trump pretends it never happened.

And in every single case, late-night TV is waiting.

Kimmel also highlighted Trump’s comments abroad, where he called Italy’s prime minister a “beautiful young woman” and asked if she minded being described that way — a reminder that Trump’s commentary about female leaders has rarely centered on policy.

The joke landed hard:
“This isn’t diplomacy. It’s a beauty pageant he never stopped judging.”

By the end of the segment, Kimmel had drawn a sharp portrait of Trump and Leavitt — not as masterminds, not as political strategists, but as the latest duo caught in a whirlpool of self-inflicted controversies.

It wasn’t just mockery. It was exposure.

A president unable to stop commenting on women’s looks.
A press secretary tangled in contradictions, bizarre claims, and headlines she never saw coming.
An administration that seems to confuse governance with stagecraft.

And Jimmy Kimmel, standing at center stage, shining the brightest — and harshest — light possible.

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