Protect your children from adult content and block access to this site by using parental controls. PARENTS, PLEASE BE ADVISED: If you are a parent, it is your responsibility to keep any age-restricted content from being displayed to your children or wards. Furthermore, you represent and warrant that you will not allow any minor access to this site or services. This website should only be accessed if you are at least 18 years old or of legal age to view such material in your local jurisdiction, whichever is greater. Trump: you know when gets them rocking: ymca it's the gay national anthem /9d7wpHLZeQ- andre vautour ?? March 10, 2022įor the record, there is no official “gay national anthem,” though Wikipedia does describe “Y.M.C.A.” as one of several “classic gay anthems.” But according to my extensive fact checking (attending numerous weddings with cheesy DJs and high boomer attendance), his assertion that “Y.M.C.A.” “gets them moving” is 100 percent true.You are about to enter a website that contains explicit material (pornography). ‘Y.M.C.A.’ gets people up and it gets them moving.” Did you ever hear that?” Trump asked the podcast hosts. But what bangers, specifically, are on his approved playlist? So basically, Trump is a DJ in the same way that Kendall Roy is. He explained that when Mar-a-Lago advertises that the ex-president will be “playing the role of DJ,” that doesn’t mean he’s spinning records. Toward the end of the interview Trump was asked about reports that he’s been DJ-ing at Mar-a-Lago events.
(To be clear, I would never suggest such a thing, as Willis, who wrote the song, has promised to “sue the next media organization, or anyone else, that falsely suggests ‘Y.M.C.A.’ is somehow about illicit gay sex.”) But on the Full Send podcast, Trump made it clear that he’s well aware of this association and has no problem with it.
Many were perplexed by MAGA-land’s enthusiasm for “Y.M.C.A.,” since Trump’s crew has a reputation for being scarily homophobic and the song is widely assumed to be about gay sex. Late on Thursday, YouTube removed the Trump interview after classifying it as “content that advances false claims that widespread fraud, errors, or glitches changed the outcome of the U.S. (The Full Send Podcast has suffered a similar fate. Trump’s Twitter account has been deleted, of course, but presumably the video looked something like the MSNBC compilation below. Trump fully embraced this, tweeting out a supercut of himself bopping to the song on Election Day 2020, with the caption “VOTE! VOTE! VOTE!”
Instead, Trump created his own “dad dance,” which became a meme. He’s changed it to M-A-G-A or something.” (Willis said the group asked Trump to stop using their song, to no avail.) I’ve never seen him actually put his hands up and make the Y.M.C.A. Village People lead singer Victor Willis noted in an interview with BBC News, “Donald Trump does what Donald Trump does. Trump loved to bounce around onstage to “Y.M.C.A.,” but weirdly he didn’t do the universally known dance moves. There they go /F8u14NBs3n- Aaron Rupar January 20, 2021 It became a staple at Trump’s 2020 campaign rallies, and it even served as the outro for his entire presidency.
Trump’s passion for the 1978 song by disco group Village People is the stuff of legend. The biggest news of the interview, as far as I’m concerned, is that the former president has finally explained his love for the song “Y.M.C.A.” But they also check out with everything I know about Donald Trump. To be sure, both of these sentences are quite unhinged. While Politico Playbook chose to highlight this: “Donald Trump was asked how he saw the invasion of Ukraine unfolding, and he answered by knocking the use of windmills and green energy …” The Daily Mail went with this headline: “Trump claims he sent German Chancellor Angela Merkel a white flag as a ‘gift’ for ‘surrendering to Russia’ by signing the Nord Stream 2 agreement.” Yesterday Donald Trump sat down for an hour-long podcast interview with the Nelk Boys, a.k.a Canadian YouTubers the Toronto Star describes as some of “the most recognizable personalities for young people in North America.” (I live in North America but I’m old, so I’ll have to trust them on this.) As hosts Kyle Forgeard, Bob Menery, Steve Deleonardis, and Salim Sirur knocked back cans of their Happy Dad hard seltzer, Trump proceeded to make so much ridiculous news that outlets didn’t quite know what to do with it.