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Edition of 20:00 CETThursday, July 2, 2026
311 outlets · 17 languages162 briefings today
Geopolitics & PoliticsThursday, July 2, 2026

Trump Deploys AI-Generated Doctor Video to Mock Critics with ‘TDS’ Diagnosis

The US president shared a deepfake clip prescribing Diet Coke for ‘Trump Derangement Syndrome’, extending his pattern of using synthetic media to attack opponents.

President Donald Trump posted a 90-second AI-generated video on his Truth Social platform late on 2 July, depicting himself as a physician diagnosing prominent Hollywood critics with what he calls “Trump Derangement Syndrome” (TDS). The clip, released ahead of the Independence Day weekend, shows a deepfake Trump in a white lab coat offering a “treatment plan” before cutting to synthetic versions of actors Robert De Niro, Julia Roberts, Edward Norton, and John Leguizamo, as well as television hosts Whoopi Goldberg and Rosie O’Donnell. Each AI-created figure describes personal distress attributed to the fictitious condition, after which the presidential avatar prescribes turning off “fake news,” praying, and drinking Diet Coke to “see a remarkable difference in your life.”

Viewed from Washington, the video reinforces a long-standing rhetorical tactic in which Trump and his supporters dismiss political opposition as a psychological affliction. The term TDS, an evolution of the “Bush Derangement Syndrome” coined by commentator Charles Krauthammer in 2003, has been used by the president to characterise criticism as irrational. During a May White House event, Trump asserted he had heard TDS “is actually a disease.” The new clip weaponises that framing by having AI-generated celebrities appear to endorse his cure, a format that mimics direct-to-consumer pharmaceutical advertising familiar to American audiences.

The post is the latest in a series of AI-generated content shared by Trump that has drawn rebuke even from within his own party. In April, he deleted an image portraying himself as Jesus Christ after it triggered outcry from Republican officials and the Vatican; he later shared another AI image of himself embraced by Jesus. In February, a video depicting Barack and Michelle Obama as apes was removed following accusations of racism from Republican Senator Tim Scott. Analysts in London note that the pattern suggests a deliberate strategy of using synthetic media to bypass traditional gatekeepers and energise his base, while normalising deepfake technology in political communication.

International media coverage has focused on the video’s provocative use of celebrity likenesses without consent. Outlets in the Middle East and Latin America highlighted the satirical treatment of well-known figures, while Russian state-leaning media framed it as a “joke treatment course” for political opponents. No legal challenge has yet been announced by the actors depicted, though US publicity-rights law could provide grounds for action. The video remains accessible on Trump’s platform, and his aides have not indicated whether further AI-driven content is planned as the 2026 midterm campaign season approaches.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 7 languages

48%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Atlantic / Anglosphere pressRussian & CIS press
Atlantic / Anglosphere press
IronySchadenfreude

The US president shared a deepfake video casting himself as a doctor who prescribes Diet Coke to cure 'Trump Derangement Syndrome', openly mocking celebrity critics. The clip is framed as another bizarre late-night post that trivializes political opposition through AI-generated parody.

Russian & CIS press/ State
SkepticismDetachment

The American leader published an AI-generated video in which he, as a doctor, offers a humorous 'treatment course' for political opponents suffering from the so-called 'Trump Derangement Syndrome'. The event is reported factually, without additional commentary or judgment.

Broaden your view

Read more
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Upd. 10:34 PM7 languages · 13 outlets
PreviousGeopolitics & PoliticsNext
13 outlets|7 languages|3 min read
Thursday, July 2, 2026

Trump Deploys AI-Generated Doctor Video to Mock Critics with ‘TDS’ Diagnosis

The US president shared a deepfake clip prescribing Diet Coke for ‘Trump Derangement Syndrome’, extending his pattern of using synthetic media to attack opponents.

President Donald Trump posted a 90-second AI-generated video on his Truth Social platform late on 2 July, depicting himself as a physician diagnosing prominent Hollywood critics with what he calls “Trump Derangement Syndrome” (TDS). The clip, released ahead of the Independence Day weekend, shows a deepfake Trump in a white lab coat offering a “treatment plan” before cutting to synthetic versions of actors Robert De Niro, Julia Roberts, Edward Norton, and John Leguizamo, as well as television hosts Whoopi Goldberg and Rosie O’Donnell. Each AI-created figure describes personal distress attributed to the fictitious condition, after which the presidential avatar prescribes turning off “fake news,” praying, and drinking Diet Coke to “see a remarkable difference in your life.”

Viewed from Washington, the video reinforces a long-standing rhetorical tactic in which Trump and his supporters dismiss political opposition as a psychological affliction. The term TDS, an evolution of the “Bush Derangement Syndrome” coined by commentator Charles Krauthammer in 2003, has been used by the president to characterise criticism as irrational. During a May White House event, Trump asserted he had heard TDS “is actually a disease.” The new clip weaponises that framing by having AI-generated celebrities appear to endorse his cure, a format that mimics direct-to-consumer pharmaceutical advertising familiar to American audiences.

The post is the latest in a series of AI-generated content shared by Trump that has drawn rebuke even from within his own party. In April, he deleted an image portraying himself as Jesus Christ after it triggered outcry from Republican officials and the Vatican; he later shared another AI image of himself embraced by Jesus. In February, a video depicting Barack and Michelle Obama as apes was removed following accusations of racism from Republican Senator Tim Scott. Analysts in London note that the pattern suggests a deliberate strategy of using synthetic media to bypass traditional gatekeepers and energise his base, while normalising deepfake technology in political communication.

International media coverage has focused on the video’s provocative use of celebrity likenesses without consent. Outlets in the Middle East and Latin America highlighted the satirical treatment of well-known figures, while Russian state-leaning media framed it as a “joke treatment course” for political opponents. No legal challenge has yet been announced by the actors depicted, though US publicity-rights law could provide grounds for action. The video remains accessible on Trump’s platform, and his aides have not indicated whether further AI-driven content is planned as the 2026 midterm campaign season approaches.

Source divergence

Geopolitics & Politics · 13 outlets · 7 languages

48%Medium

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Neutral40%
Critical60%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 7 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Atlantic / Anglosphere pressRussian & CIS press
Atlantic / Anglosphere press
IronySchadenfreude

The US president shared a deepfake video casting himself as a doctor who prescribes Diet Coke to cure 'Trump Derangement Syndrome', openly mocking celebrity critics. The clip is framed as another bizarre late-night post that trivializes political opposition through AI-generated parody.

Russian & CIS press/ State
SkepticismDetachment

The American leader published an AI-generated video in which he, as a doctor, offers a humorous 'treatment course' for political opponents suffering from the so-called 'Trump Derangement Syndrome'. The event is reported factually, without additional commentary or judgment.

This story appeared in

13 outlets · 7 languages

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