Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

MAGA Fan Can't Back Up Claim That Disney Is 'Advertising Gayness' To Kids In Awkward Video

TikTok screenshots of Davram Stiefler interviewing MAGA supporter
@thegoodliars/TikTok

Davram Stiefler of the comedy duo 'The Good Liars' put a Trump-supporting grandpa on the hot seat after he claimed Disney is 'advertising gayness' to his grandkids—and the MAGA fan crashed and burned.

The Good Liars, a comedy duo known for lampooning American politics, went viral once again after they shared a clip of a MAGA supporter they interviewed who absurdly claimed that Disney is "advertising gayness."

In a TikTok video shared by the comedy duo, the man professed his support for former President Donald Trump following his arraignment in Georgia on charges that he interfered in the state's electoral process in an effort to overturn the results of the 2020 general election.


When The Good Liars' Davram Stiefler asked the MAGA supporter to elaborate on his claim about Disney, the man admitted that his assertion was based on hearsay and added that he didn't have direct knowledge of the situation.

When further pressed on whether there was concrete evidence of Disney's influence on children's views, the man conceded that he did not possess such information.

You can watch the awkward moment in the video below.

@thegoodliars

At Trump’s arrest in Georgia this guy was concerned that Disney was “advertising gayness” #disney #desantis #florida #georgia #fyp #arrest #gay #advertising

When Stiefler asked the man to "clarify" his statement that Disney is "advertising gayness," the man replied:

“I don’t [know]. Disney was going into the business of putting ideas in my kids', my grandkids’ minds, that I didn’t want them putting in my grandkids’ minds.”

When Stiefler asked "Did that actually happen?" the man was stumped:

“I don’t know. I’m just going on what I heard.”

And when pressed on whether his kids had "changed their views on things based on Disney," the man could only respond:

“No, I don’t.”

Earlier this year, Disney filed a lawsuit accusing Florida Republican Governor Ron DeSantis of taking action against the company when its then-CEO criticized Florida's Parental Rights in Education plan—or "Don't Say Gay" law—which limits the instruction of gender identity and sexuality in public schools.

DeSantis' administration then dissolved a longstanding agreement that gave Disney jurisdiction over the infrastructure requirements and responsibilities of the area where Disney World is located while leaving over 1,500 other such jurisdictions in place.

Despite concerns over the burden this change could place on local taxpayers, the Governor's administration continued to counter any attempt made by Disney to have the agreement reinstated.

The clip of The Good Liars' latest encounter with the MAGA tribe quickly went viral—and people had much to say.


The Good Liars have previously showcased what can only be described as an alternate reality of sorts among Trump supporters that highlights the strength of former Republican President Donald Trump's cult of personality.

For instance, last year social media users were left dumbfounded after one of Trump's ardent supporters insisted Democratic President Joe Biden is in fact dead and the imposter is actually just actor Jim Carrey in a mask.

The woman, who wore a T-shirt bearing an animated likeness of the former President, claimed "the person that’s doing the stand-up job of trying to wake people up, is an actor wearing a mask."

She said she believes "there are several different people playing Joe Biden at this point."

More from News/lgbtq

Linda McMahon; Mrs. Puff from "Spongebob Squarepants"
Taylor Hill/WireImage; Nickelodeon

Department Of Education's Bizarre 'SpongeBob' Tweet For Teacher Appreciation Week Backfires Spectacularly

The Department of Education (DOE) was criticized after tweeting a strange image of Mrs. Puff from SpongeBob SquarePants to mark Teacher Appreciation Week, drawing outrage online.

The agency wrote, “Teachers are dedicated,” alongside an image of Mrs. Puff, the boating school instructor from SpongeBob SquarePants best known for repeatedly trying—and failing—to help SpongeBob pass his driving exam, depicted reading a book titled “MAGA.”

Keep ReadingShow less
hantavirus illustration
Joao Luiz Bulcao/Hans Lucas/AFP via Getty Images

Infectious Diseases Expert Speaks Out After MAGA Makes Predictably Unfounded Claim About Hantavirus

For those unaware, ivermectin is an FDA-approved antiparasitic medication used to treat conditions caused by parasitic worms as well as external parasites like lice.

Parasites are organisms that depend on a host to both survive and spread. There are three main types of parasites that call humans home—the endoparasites protozoa and helminths (worms), which cause infection inside the body, and ectoparasites, which cause infection superficially within or on the skin.

Keep ReadingShow less
Hayden Panettiere
Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images

Hayden Panettiere Just Publicly Came Out As Bisexual—And She Explained Why She Waited So Long

Scream and Heroes star Hayden Panettiere is soon releasing her memoir This is Me: A Reckoning, and according to an interview with US Weekly, she almost didn't write it.

Despite many of her characters being confident, kind, and often bubbly in nature, Panettiere's life at home was riddled with dark moments, including tremendous public pressure, abuse, drug addiction, and tragic loss.

Keep ReadingShow less
Brian Niccol
Eugene Gologursky/Getty Images for Fast Company

The CEO Of Starbucks Just Gave A Mind-Numbing Defense For Charging $9 For Coffee 'Experience'—And People Aren't Having It

What's the absolute most you'd ever agree to pay for a coffee? If you said the absurd amount of $9, you're apparently Starbucks' ideal customer.

The coffee chain's CEO Brian Niccol is getting dragged on the internet for insisting that $9 is a perfectly reasonable price for a cup of joe.

Keep ReadingShow less
Zohran Mamdani
Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images

Zohran Mamdani Praised For His Post About Fashion Industry's Unsung Heroes After Skipping Met Gala

Each year, the Costume Institute of the Metropolitan Museum of Art—dubbed just The Met—hosts an invite-only fundraising gala in New York City, currently boasting a $100,000-a-ticket price tag.

The Met Gala has been called "fashion’s biggest night" with icons of fashion and entertainment rubbing elbows with the uber-wealthy in The Met's Fifth Avenue location on Manhattan's Upper East Side. This year's theme was "Fashion is Art."

Keep ReadingShow less