Every time Donald Trump opens Truth Social, two names send him into a full-blown meltdown: Stephen Colbert and Robert De Niro. And this past year, those two didnāt just mock him ā they obliterated him, night after night, on live TV and global stages. What they unleashed was a relentless cultural beatdown unlike anything Trump has faced since stepping into politics.

For months, Colbert and De Niro have been doing what millions wished someone would: shining a spotlight on Trump’s chaos, cruelty, and crumbling sanity. And Trump? Heās been rage-posting at 1 a.m., misspelling through tirades, and calling anyone who criticizes him a āloser,ā all while these two entertainment giants tear down the last pieces of his fragile ego.
It began with a moment that instantly went viral: Trump celebrated CBS canceling The Late Show, bragging, āI absolutely love that Colbert got fired.ā But instead of crawling away quietly, Colbert stepped on stage the next night, stared straight into the camera and said:
āHow dare you, sir?ā
Then, with perfect New York bite, he delivered what he called āsatirical witā ā a vicious, elegant evisceration that had viewers chanting his name.
And he wasnāt done.

Over the next 10 months, Colbert unleashed a nightly barrage of brutal comedy, exposing Trumpās lies, mocking his strange obsession with cognitive tests, dragging his fake awards, and spotlighting the White Houseās disturbing propaganda ā including posts celebrating migrant abuse and adolescent memes attacking Democrats.
When the Trump regime introduced its āGold Cardā ā a million-dollar fast pass to U.S. citizenship for wealthy elites and Russian oligarchs ā Colbertās team brought out a golden statue of Colbert himself. The audience exploded. He hoisted it triumphantly ā a perfect parody of Trump’s desperation to be validated by Hollywood.
And then came the moment Trump can never erase:
Colbert won an Emmy.
And he made sure Trump heard about it every night.

But while Colbert was attacking from the stage, Robert De Niro was attacking from everywhere else.
The Oscar-winning legend has become one of Trumpās most relentless truth-tellers ā at film festivals, on interviews, on red carpets, and in speeches around the world. De Niro refuses to sugarcoat anything. He calls Trump exactly what he believes he is:
a con man, an authoritarian wannabe, a national disaster, and a threat to the world.

In Cannes, while accepting an honorary Palme dāOr, De Niro warned that Trump didnāt just endanger U.S. democracy ā he threatened global stability. He called out Trumpās disturbing admiration for dictators, the violent rhetoric, the cruelty toward migrants, and the chilling obsession with seizing power.
And De Niro wasnāt exaggerating. Trumpās former Chief of Staff, General Kelly, confirmed Trump repeatedly praised Hitler and mocked fallen American soldiers. Meanwhile, the White House continued posting deranged propaganda videos ā including clips showing migrants being tortured.

De Niro also dragged Trump over the resurfaced Epstein birthday letter, a grotesque note Trump wrote in 2003 framed inside a sketch of a naked woman ā signed right beneath her waist. The Wall Street Journal authenticated it. Trump has been scrambling ever since to block Epstein files from surfacing.
Together, Colbert and De Niro have become Trumpās ultimate nightmare duo:
a comedian with global influence and an actor with global respect ā both publicly dismantling the myth Trump spent decades building.

Trump can rage-post. He can insult. He can lie.
But he canāt stop them.
And he definitely canāt drown out the applause every time Colbert or De Niro hits the stage and destroys him again.
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