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Trump, Inc.

Trump Team Online

Trump, Inc.

WNYC Studios

Don, Trump, News, Business, Jared, Ivanka, Jr, Politics, Business News, Government, Eric

4.65.7K Ratings

🗓️ 24 June 2020

⏱️ 23 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

This story was co-published with ProPublica. Sign up for email updates from Trump, Inc. to get the latest on our investigations. Donald Trump is famous — and infamous — for his use of Twitter and Facebook. But particularly since the pandemic forced him to largely swear off his favorite mass, in-person rallies, his campaign has been amping up the use of another form of alternative media: YouTube and podcasts. The president’s most recent sit-down interview? As it happens, it occurred last week on “Triggered,” a YouTube program hosted by his namesake son. In a conversation in the White House’s map room, Trump Jr. quizzed his dad about everything from who his favorite child is to whether aliens exist — to a Fox News report that Osama bin Laden wanted to assassinate President Barack Obama so that Joe Biden would ascend to the presidency. This was no ordinary campaign video, nor was it a random question, this week’s episode of “Trump, Inc.” makes clear. “Triggered” followed the exchange about bin Laden with a campaign ad that repeated the same point, showing how closely the program’s conversations are tied in with campaign talking points. “Trump, Inc.” explores the Trump campaign’s universe of podcasts and YouTube shows, which has expanded since the coronavirus began locking down huge swaths of the country. (The campaign did not respond to requests for comment.) Sure, every major candidate has a podcast. Hillary Clinton had one. Biden has one, though it hasn’t been updated since mid-May. But unlike those dutiful and largely ignored offerings, “Triggered” is part of a growing constellation of shows. There’s the campaign’s official podcast, hosted by Trump’s daughter-in-law, Lara. (Kayleigh McEnany used to fill in occasionally as host before being promoted to White House press secretary.) And there’s “The Right View.” Just imagine “The View,” conducted entirely on Zoom, if Meghan McCain was considered too liberal to be on the panel and if no one ever disagreed. The programs have combined to create something of a Trump media network, one that takes the president’s bellicose messaging and transports it to an environment of family, friendship and banter. People are starting to pay attention. Nightly programming of the unofficial Trump Network reaches upward of a million viewers each week. It’s a realm dedicated to reinforcing even the president’s most incendiary ideas — with no pushback, skepticism or difference of opinion. To learn more about how the programs lay out their views of everything from bin Laden assassination plots to the controversy over vote by mail, listen to this week’s episode of “Trump, Inc.”

Transcript

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0:00.0

It's a Thursday night, 8 p.m.

0:09.3

Some big golden block letters appear on a screen.

0:12.6

You know the style.

0:13.6

They say, Team Trump Online.

0:16.7

Cut the shots of the White House, the map room.

0:20.1

There are two chairs placed in front of a fireplace.

0:23.3

There are lots of lights, microphones, monitors.

0:26.8

The setup looks like President Trump might be sitting for an interview with a

0:29.9

network news anchor.

0:32.5

This is an interview.

0:34.4

But it's with his son, Donald Trump Jr.

0:38.2

It's a special, Father's Day edition of Don Jr.'s online show, Triggered.

0:43.5

Which is your favorite Trump child and why is it Ivanka?

0:46.5

Why is that one being here?

0:51.8

I have had a couple calls from you from the White House saying, you know, Don, maybe you're

0:57.2

getting a little hot on social media.

1:00.2

Do you understand irony and how that works?

1:04.4

I do.

1:06.4

In the world of this show, there is no coronavirus.

1:09.3

The economic crisis is only glancingly present.

1:11.9

The job numbers came out last week and then we threw the roof.

1:14.4

There are references to the growing protests around police brutality and racism.

...

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