Tag: great american state fair
With July 4 Fiasco Looming, Trump Infuriated By Pitiful Turnout At His 'State Fair'

With July 4 Fiasco Looming, Trump Infuriated By Pitiful Turnout At His 'State Fair'

President Donald Trump is furious that his supporters aren't showing up to attend his "state fair" in the District of Columbia.

Since the start last week, the response has been minuscule. Independent journalist Amanda Moore has been on the scene every day to narrate what she's seeing and provide videos of the crowd sizes at the great stage.

The Daily Beast reported on Wednesday that Trump "freaked out" seeing the small crowds at his fair.

One of the more successful turnouts was Trump's rally opening night. Compared to Trump's rallies in the past, however, it was painfully tiny. While the Freedom 250 spokesperson claimed that there have ben over 150,000 who "flocked" from around the world, CNN revealed things aren't going the way Trump planned. Insiders told CNN that Trump was “livid” at the low turnout for his opening remarks.

All the events lead up to Trump's big event on Saturday. The Washingtonian noted that Trump's record-breaking fireworks display will be so gigantic that the low-lying Washington D.C. "bowl" and predicted cloud cover could turn it into more of a "smoke show" and block the fireworks entirely. As the Capital Weather Gang said, the smoke could "just ... hang."

Trump had a similar problem on the night of his first inauguration, when heavy cloud cover not only trapped the smoke but also blocked views of the fireworks, videos confirmed There are a lot of things working against his crowd-size plans: predicted triple-digit temperatures that have already resulted in an "extreme heat watch," stifling humidity and potential severe storms, local WJAR reported Wednesday. They called it a "quadruple threat" because of the risk of power outages from energy use.

"This could be one of the hottest Fourth of Julys the D.C. area has seen in decades, as emergency officials ramp up coordination ahead of the holiday," the report said.

According to CNN, the White House is "already bracing for an underwhelming showing" on Saturday, in large part because the event is significantly later than previous years. In the past, the big concert in the U.S. ended around 9 p.m. EST, with the National Symphony Orchestra playing the "1812 Overture" while fireworks and cannons went off. This year it will end hours later.

“I do not understand why we are doing this so late,” one White House official said about the late hour. “I’m really not sure who thought this was a good idea.”

The Independence Day fireworks are normally a family-friendly event and children don't usually stay up so late. At the same time, public transportation for those more than 20 miles outside of D.C. will be restricted because the last MARC train out of Union Station leaves at 10:25 p.m. Luckily, those within about a 20-mile radius around Washington will still be able to access the metro until 2 a.m.

One local D.C. limousine company wrote, "Every transportation option has a real failure mode on this day.""OK, this is quickly becoming proof that you can just say “great American state fair” and get a million views. Almost nobody replying to it follows me or has any idea what I cover," said independent Amanda Moore online about the state fair.

She wasn't the only one to point out that social media doesn't reflect "real life."

Stand Together vice president Daniel Bassali called it "Just another example of what’s online isn’t reality."

TMZ has been posting photos of the fair. In one case, actor Dean Cain and Dr. Mehmet Oz cheered the crowd before the stage. TMZ panned around to look at the crowd, seeing a few dozen people.

Trump proclaimed over the weekend that his event was “packed with happy people," but rain scared off key performer and one-hit-wonder Vanilla Ice from performing.

Fox News has provided a lot of comedy relief for those watching clips of the anchors claiming huge crowds, only to look behind them and see they're anemic at best. One pro-Trump fan live-streamed their attendance at the fair, also claiming thousands of people, only to find far fewer.

At one point, the network was ridiculed for showing a medium-sized crowd sitting on the grass watching a big screen. The Fox chyron read, "State Fair Surprise: Karoline Leavitt enjoys fair with her family." The photo was of World Cup fans at the FIFA Fan Zone in Washington instead. FIFA set up large screens in cities around the U.S. for fans who want to watch the games with a group of other fans. The fan zone is also on the National Mall.

Two sources told CNN that Trump "flipped" when he saw the low turnout at the state fair, and staff were even told to delete the photos from social media in hopes he wouldn't see them.

“The mistake here was not driving attendance,” said one person close to the White House. “It was an ‘if you build it, they will come’ mentality that failed.”

Dozens of people walked out of Trump's speech at the fair's opening.

As CNN wrote, "The episode has further heightened the stakes for Trump’s Independence Day address, which represents just the latest element of the U.S.’ semiquincentennial celebration that he’s sought to effectively make an extension of his all-consuming presidency."

Reprinted with permission from Alternet

Vibes Off: Trump's Tacky Birthday Celebration For America Is Historic Cringe

Vibes Off: Trump's Tacky Birthday Celebration For America Is Historic Cringe

In his second term, Donald Trump scored one of the biggest gimmes in presidential history: His term included America’s 250th birthday. How easy it should have been to unite the nation—at least a little, at least briefly—under a common star-spangled banner.

Instead, he has failed to find popular support for the key events in his semiquincentennial project.

Only 51 percent of voters report being “extremely” or “very” excited for America’s 250th anniversary, according to a poll conducted for Fox News. That’s about the same as the share of Americans who celebrated the Fourth of July last year, per YouGov data.

Chart by Andrew Mangan/Source: Fox News/Beacon Research/Shaw and Company ResearchCreated with Datawrapper

Excitement isn’t matching the occasion, and Trump is the most to blame. He doesn’t know how to throw a party.

Take the UFC fight. On June 14, on a stage on the White House’s South Lawn, men bloodied each other across seven bouts of mixed martial arts. Trump watched the entire show, despite his penchant for sleeping through or dipping out early from other sporting events.

By and large, though, Americans didn’t care. Only 26 percent told YouGov they were interested in watching the fight. Meanwhile, 67% weren’t interested, including 53 percent who were “not at all interested.” As much as they did care, a majority of Americans (51%) disapproved of the fight being held at all, another YouGov survey found. Only 27 percernt approved.

An average of 7 million Americans streamed the fight. Though that may be a live-event record for Paramount+, it’s only about 18 percent of the live domestic viewership of Netflix’s 2024 boxing match between Mike Tyson and Jake Paul.

Such paltry numbers shouldn’t surprise anyone. MMA, which the late Arizona Sen. John McCain once derided as “human cockfighting,” is tied with wrestling for the least-popular sport in America, according to a 2025 YouGov poll. The UFC itself has the second-worst favorability of any major U.S. sports organization, after the WWE. And YouGov finds that only 38 percent of Americans know who the sport’s most well-known contemporary personality is (Anderson Silva). Compare that with tennis, which isn’t much more popular in the U.S., and yet 81 percent of Americans know of Venus Williams.

Chart by Andrew Mangan/Source YouGovCreated with Datawrapper

Larry David, the famed TV writer and co-creator of “Seinfeld,” summed up many Americans’ take on the fight, telling Variety on Tuesday, “It was embarrassing. I was embarrassed to be an American.”

And yet the fight may not have been Trump’s biggest misstep on the march toward July 4. After all, at least “UFC Freedom 250” happened. The same isn’t true for the planned concert from Freedom 250—which is the White House initiative working independently of the bipartisan America 250 effort. Trump was forced to cancel that show after nearly all the acts dropped out.

But even if that concert had gone on as planned, it would have been a dud. Roughly 60 percent of Americans hadn’t heard of three of the nine announced acts, per YouGov. Only two—one-hit wonder Vanilla Ice and 1980s funk group Commodores—were known by at least two-thirds of Americans.

Chart by Andrew Mangan/ Source YouGovCreated with Datawrapper

In August, the “Freedom 250 Grand Prix” is scheduled to take place on the streets of Washington, but its viewership may prove less impressive than that of the UFC fight. May’s Indianapolis 500, IndyCar’s centerpiece race, was watched by an average of just 6.6 million viewers. If the D.C. race manages to top that, it may be due to pure gawk factor alone. Our nation’s capital, now the trashy site of car racing and cage fights.

Americans just aren’t hungry for what Trump is slinging. The vast majority (71 percent) say small local events feel like a more authentic way to commemorate the occasion, while just 30 percent prefer large national events, according to a recent Elon University poll.

Every vibe is off. His “Great American State Fair,” launched on Thursday, featured empty chairs in place of some state exhibits.

Instead of enjoyable schlock like the nation gobbled up in 1976, we’re faced with ephemera like the single ugliest shirt in human history, some dead ducks at the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool, and a proposed $250 bill with Trump’s mug on it. Though the creation of that currently illegal banknote would require an act of Congress, the president’s top lackeys are pushing for it. Of course, Americans hate the idea: Only 16 percet favor creating the Trump-emblazoned bill, while 70 percent oppose it, per a recent YouGov/Economist poll.

But the $250 bill, as with the events, signifies the core problem: Not only are his marquee events unpopular, they are less a celebration of America than a celebration of himself. After all, in lieu of a big concert this past Wednesday, Trump hosted a Trump rally.

It’s no wonder only 37 percent of Americans told Elon University that America’s 250th anniversary is likely to “bring people together.”

More than anyone in recent history, Trump has degraded America’s view of itself. Between 2001 and 2016, the share of Americans who said they were “extremely” or “very” proud to be an American didn’t dip below 81 percent, according to Gallup. But from 2017 to 2020—spanning Trump’s first term—each year set a new low, slipping to 63 percent in the last full year of that term.

After Trump left the White House, American pride rebounded slightly, hovering in the mid to high 60s. But last year, in the first year of his second term, it plunged to yet another new low: 58 percent.

Chart by Andrew Mangan/Source GallupCreated with Datawrapper

While 65 percent of baby boomers see being American as key to their identity, 58 percent of both millennials and Gen Zers don’t think about that piece of their identity much, a recent Ipsos poll finds. Maybe younger Americans’ sense of national identity will strengthen as they age, but it just as easily may not—especially if these greenest members of our workforce struggle to attain the “American dream.” Only 34 percent of Americans see that dream as currently attainable, according to a poll from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research. A majority (51 percent) say that dream was once true but is no longer.

And the less that people approve of how Trump is handling his job as president, the less they are interested in celebrating the big 250. A new Marquette University Law School poll finds that while 88 percent of Americans who “strongly approve” of Trump are interested in the occasion, that is shared by only 39 percent of those who “strongly disapprove” of him.

The country is divided and hurting, and the unpopular guy who helped to divide it and hurt it is throwing a big party headlined by events most of the nation has little interest in.

Woo-hoo?

Reprinted with permission from Daily Kos


Dismal Turnout For 'Massive' Trump Rally Dims Fox's 'Freedom 250' Propaganda Push

Dismal Turnout For 'Massive' Trump Rally Dims Fox's 'Freedom 250' Propaganda Push

President Donald Trump’s Fox News propagandists would like to use this summer’s celebration of the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence to smear Democrats as unpatriotic. But if Wednesday night’s launch of the Great American State Fair in Washington, D.C. — a poorly-attended campaign-style Trump rally — is any indication, the strategy's fatal flaw is the president’s catastrophic unpopularity.

Trump, in collaboration with Freedom 250, the political group he launched to supplant the congressionally established organization overseeing the semiquincentennial, has turned America’s 250th birthday into a celebration of himself. After several musical acts originally slated to perform on Wednesday dropped out earlier this month in response to this politicization, Trump announced that he would be the night’s main attraction at what he termed “the Greatest Rally, EVER.”

Fox, led by Kayleigh McEnany, the former Trump White House press secretary turned network host, set the expectations sky-high in the hours before the event.

McEnany told viewers on Outnumbered that the president would be “kicking off” America 250 “with a massive rally on the National Mall.”

“I'm very excited about tonight because Trump has said this is going to be the greatest rally he has ever done, and I've been to a lot of his rallies,” she added on Jesse Watters Primetime. “But if he's saying this is the greatest rally he's ever done, I'm here for it.”

But the event turned out to be a low-energy dud, with the listless president praising himself and his administration’s accomplishments to a shockingly small audience.

NBC News estimated attendance at “more than 1,000,” while The Washington Post reported that “the crowd thinly covered an area about the length of the National Museum of American History, smaller than some summer outdoor movie screenings.”

The Post further reported that the president “did not appear to enjoy the speech” and “wrapped in under a half-hour,” adding: "He asked for a bigger turnout for his next appearance on July 4."

“Please show up, he said. ”Because if we have two empty seats, you know what’s going to happen: the fake news is going to say he didn’t fill out the arena.”

Trump’s performance, his attempt to refocus the semiquincentennial around himself, and the shrinking percentage of Americans who think he is doing a good job pose a problem for Fox’s effort to use the celebration as a cudgel against Democrats.

On Jesse Watters’ show, contributor Joe Concha used the events on the network to draw purported contrasts between “patriotic” Republicans and Democrats “downright miserable about the country.”

“As we see this communist takeover continue in major American cities, I mean, do you want to be the party that hates this country, they want to tear it all down because some people just want to watch the world burn, or do you want to be the party that embraces what makes this country so awesome?” Concha said.

He then provided a list of such things: “Amazon, Apple, White Castle, Top Golf, the Jersey shore, Savannah Bananas, Sydney Sweeney.” (Notably, he did not mention the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, or any part of the American creed.)

“So the entire lead-up to July 4, I consider it one big trigger warning to the Mamdani minions out there, because after all they are happiest when foreign flags are flying,” host Laura Ingraham likewise sneered on Wednesday before Trump’s speech. “Because to them, red, white, and blue, the big extravaganza, is like sunshine to a vampire.”

But on Thursday morning, Fox’s coverage of Trump’s rally was as sparse as the previous night’s crowd. The network’s reality distortion machine is unable to countenance their beloved president’s unpopularity, and it will ignore or deny all such evidence in order to carefully shield viewers from the historic levels of dissent Trump faces.

Reprinted with permission from Media Matters

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