• @DaddleDew
    link
    English
    4927 days ago

    There was a Trump interview from the 90s where he said that if he ever ran for office he would go Republican because they were stupid, gullible and easily manipulated. Sadly I cannot find that interview anymore.

      • The Pantser
        link
        English
        1127 days ago

        Did not see where he said he would run as Republican

        • Cadeillac
          link
          English
          1227 days ago

          Yeah, he doesn’t. He praises republican leaders and policies, but no where does he say he’d run as a republican nor call the voters stupid. The man makes himself look bad enough, we don’t need misinformation

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        1027 days ago

        It’s honestly shocking how different he is now in speeches. He still came off as a sleaze bag 30 years ago, but not someone I would assume is functionally illiterate.

        • Cadeillac
          link
          English
          627 days ago

          Right? This must be the nostalgia goggles his cult is wearing

        • Cadeillac
          link
          English
          327 days ago

          You are absolutely right, but this is the interview that is being referred to as far as I can discern. I think people tried to infer he was calling them stupid? Something to do with praising republican leaders and policies maybe? Definitely a stretch, and we don’t need misinformation to make this scum look bad

      • Cadeillac
        link
        English
        1027 days ago

        I managed to stop the page from loading the paywall. Lots of text incoming

        If Oprah Winfrey’s “active thinking” about a run for the nation’s top office evolves into a bid to unseat Donald Trump in 2020, there’s one clip of the pair that’s already the front-runner to be played ad infinitum.

        It’s a nearly three-minute video from a 1988 interview on Winfrey’s show. In the hot seat is a blue-suited, much younger Donald Trump, espousing the same protectionist beliefs that would ultimately land him in the Oval Office.

        With the microphone is, of course, Winfrey, asking Trump questions that could easily be aimed at a 2018, post-Golden Globes version of herself:

        This sounds like political, presidential talk to me. And I know people have talked to you about whether or not you want to run — would you ever?

        In 1988, it was another celebrity interview. But in the intervening three decades, the stars of the clip have become some of the most famous faces on the planet, and more political. One is president and has launched a reelection committee. The other endorsed Barack Obama, then Hillary Clinton, and is facing a renewed round of calls that she seek the presidency after a Golden Globes message that many have likened to a political stump speech.

        Their 1988 interview happened shortly after Trump had taken out a full-page ad criticizing U.S. foreign policy. George H.W. Bush and Michael Dukakis were embroiled in a race for the presidency.

        So Winfrey quickly steered the conversation to politics — particularly whether Trump would ever be involved in it.

        He demurred with the same answer he’d given time and again:

        “I love what I’m doing,” the real estate magnate said on the clip. “I really like it,” but he said he would “never want to rule it out totally, because I really am tired of seeing what’s happening with this country, how we’re really making other people live like kings and we’re not.”

        Oprah Winfrey’s presidential candidate-esque Golden Globes speech, annotated

        Thirty years later, it is Winfrey apparently mulling whether to place her life on hold to steer the country.

        The apparent reconsideration is happening after Winfrey gave an inspiring call to arms encouraging people — including “some pretty phenomenal women” — to help effect change:

        “I want all the girls watching here and now to know that a new day is on the horizon! And when that new day finally dawns, it will be because of a lot of magnificent women, many of whom are right here in this room tonight, and some pretty phenomenal men, fighting hard to make sure that they become the leaders who take us to the time when nobody ever has to say “me too” again.

        As The Washington Post’s Steven Zeitchik wrote afterward, “Winfrey’s speech had a stump-like quality, earning raves for its inspirational tone, its careful balance of deep scars of racial and gender injustice with an optimism that they could be healed.”

        Friends told CNN anonymously that Winfrey was “actively thinking” about running for president. Her longtime partner, Stedman Graham, said she “would absolutely do it.”

        Afterward, Meryl Streep told Zeitchik that she was on the Oprah train. “She launched a rocket tonight. I want her to run for president,” Streep said. “I don’t think she had any intention [of declaring]. But now she doesn’t have a choice.”

        Although both Trump and Winfrey have a show-business pedigree and billionaire bank accounts, the two stars of that 1988 clip have vastly different backstories.

        Trump was the fourth child of a millionaire real estate developer and was raised in a 23-room brick mansion in Jamaica Estates, Queens. He attended a military school and started his real estate empire with a million-dollar loan from his father.

        Winfrey told the Golden Globes audience that she is the daughter of a woman who made money cleaning other people’s houses. Winfrey’s nationally syndicated talk show became a launchpad for a global media empire that turned her into a billionaire.

        Several women have accused Trump of inappropriate sexual touching. In 2005, Trump bragged in vulgar terms about groping, kissing and trying to have sex with women in a conversation caught on a hot microphone, a recording that was later obtained by The Post.

        Winfrey has spoken publicly about her sexual abuse at the hands of her mother’s friends in Mississippi, and she spoke at length about abuse victims in her Golden Globes speech.

        “I want tonight to express gratitude to all the women who have endured years of abuse and assault because they, like my mother, had children to feed and bills to pay and dreams to pursue,” she said. “They’re the women whose names we’ll never know.”

    • @toasteecup
      link
      English
      -127 days ago

      I suspect it was faked personally

      • @DaddleDew
        link
        English
        4
        edit-2
        27 days ago

        I saw it years before deepfakes were a thing. I wish I had saved the video now. I would have loved to take a more critical look at it.

        • @toasteecup
          link
          English
          1
          edit-2
          26 days ago

          Another commentor corrected my info.

          I had suspected it was faked because I only ever saw his picture and a quote like it was designed to look like a magazine. Turns out it’s a direct quote from an Oprah interview he did in the late 80’s

          • Cadeillac
            link
            English
            326 days ago

            It actually is not a direct quote. He never said it

      • Cadeillac
        link
        English
        4
        edit-2
        27 days ago

        It was with Oprah Winfrey in 1988. Try again

        Edit: it isn’t fake, but it is false

        • @toasteecup
          link
          English
          4
          edit-2
          26 days ago

          Please explain the edit a bit

          Edit: also thank you for the info. I had only ever seen a picture with the quote and his face. So the video source is new for me and given the stated age, not faked.

          • Cadeillac
            link
            English
            426 days ago

            There is an actual interview that is referenced, but what is being said about the interview is false