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Gutfeld Schools Whoopi Over Trump Meltdown

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Gutfeld did not waste time easing into the topic.

“Guys stopped getting erections around you years before Trump got into office,” Gutfeld fired back. “Do not blame him for your dateless weekends.”

The studio erupted as the clip rapidly spread across social media, racking up hundreds of thousands of views within hours.

Yet Gutfeld was not finished.

After the personal jab, he pivoted into a broader argument about global leadership and the contrast between Trump and former President Joe Biden.

“Trump is in charge of the U.S., and it looks like whenever he is around world leaders, he’s in charge of them too – they treat him like a rock star,” Gutfeld said.

Then came the line conservatives across X and YouTube immediately turned into viral clips and memes.

“The only people being de-balled in this country are the children of liberals who trans them for virtue points at the wine club.”

Supporters praised Gutfeld for saying what many conservatives believe corporate media personalities refuse to acknowledge: that Trump projects strength on the world stage while his critics increasingly rely on outrage and theatrics.

The exchange also highlighted a growing frustration among many Americans who feel legacy media figures continue to underestimate why Trump remains politically dominant.

Goldberg framed Trump’s comments on Iran negotiations as proof that America looks weak and disconnected under his leadership. Conservatives saw the exact opposite.

Trump’s argument centered on refusing to reveal economic pressure points while negotiating with a hostile regime. To supporters, that is basic leverage, not recklessness.

Negotiators do not advertise the conditions under which they will surrender.

They establish red lines and force the opposing side to respond.

That approach, critics of the Biden-era foreign policy argue, is precisely why adversaries treated the previous administration differently than they treat Trump now.

Former White House adviser Sebastian Gorka previously noted that foreign leaders often reacted to Trump with caution and urgency long before he formally returned to office. The reasoning was simple: strength changes the tone of every negotiation.

That reality appears to be what frustrates many Trump critics the most.

For years, media personalities insisted Trump was isolated internationally, incapable of diplomacy, and a danger to American credibility. Yet many world leaders continue to prioritize meetings and direct communication with him, while adversaries appear far more careful in their public posture.

This is also not the first time Goldberg has ignited controversy with dramatic comparisons involving Trump and America.

Last year, she faced criticism after comparing life for Black Americans to conditions inside Iran, a claim that even drew pushback from some of her own co-hosts.

Now critics say her latest remarks reveal the same pattern: portraying America as broken whenever Trump gains political momentum.

Meanwhile, the clip from Gutfeld’s response continues circulating across conservative media, with supporters arguing it perfectly captured the growing divide between establishment television personalities and voters who believe the political class still refuses to understand why Trump resonates with millions of Americans.

More than anything, the viral moment underscored a larger reality in today’s political media war.

The left continues framing Trump as chaos.

His supporters continue viewing him as strength.

And every televised meltdown only seems to harden those positions further.

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