Fake News: Don Imus Did NOT Leave $2 Million To Trump's Re-Election Campaign In His Will

Fact Check

  • by: Ryan Cooper
Fake News: Don Imus Did NOT Leave $2 Million To Trump's Re-Election Campaign In His Will

Did radio shock jock Don Imus leave $2 million to President Trump's re-election campaign? No, that's not true: The story is made up and is labeled "celebrity fan fiction" on a liberal satire website that tries to mislead Trump supporters into sharing fictional stories that are clearly marked as satire.

The claim originated from an article published by Potatriots Unite on December 28, 2019, titled "Don Imus Left $2 Million To Trump's Re-Election Campaign In His Will" (archived here) which opened:

Liberals have been laughing it up over the death of radio icon Don Imus, because they can't for the life of them figure out how a "backwards hillbilly sexist douchebag" ever made it in New York radio. The answer is simple: Don Imus was everything real Americans love.

Sure, Don Imus lasted 10 years longer than his career, but that was because he was shunned by liberals for speaking the truth. Imus enshrined the values that make America great: Men are the superior gender in strength and bread-winning. The biggest problems facing our country are immigrants and the poor. People need to stop being helpless and start doing for themselves. And most importantly, we need to spend every last dime on the military if we're gonna continue to rule the free world.

Those are the things that true patriots believe, and Imus embodied them all. Now, after his passing, we're starting to learn just how amazing he truly was. Knowing his death was coming, Imus made some changes to his will that included removing his transgender daughter, who thinks she's now his son, and giving his (her?) share to the Trump 2020 campaign, which amounts to just about $2 million.

Users on social media only saw this title, description and thumbnail:

Don Imus Left $2 Million To Trump's Re-Election Campaign In His Will

What a great man.

Imus died on Friday, according to a family statement. He was 79. The cause of death was not disclosed, but Imus had announced earlier this year he had prostate cancer.

In 2007, MSNBC dropped its simulcast of the controversial radio show "Imus in the Morning" after he made racist, derogatory remarks about the Rutgers University women's basketball team.

The fictional story about Imus noted he had a transgender daughter, but there is no reporting to corrorobate this detail. The story cited no source for the claim that Imus left a $2 million donation to the Trump campaign. In fact, Imus had been critical of Trump. In 2017, he told Glenn Beck that the president did not want to serve in Vietnam because he's a "coward."

The Potatriots Unite site is part of the "America's Last Line of Defense" network of satire websites. Self-professed liberal troll Christopher Blair runs those sites. The Maine resident works alongside a loose confederation of friends and allies. Blair has been in a feud with fact-checking website Snopes, and he has also criticized other fact-checkers who labeled his work "fake news" instead of satire. In reaction, he has recently rebranded all his active websites and Facebook pages, so they carry prominent disclaimers everywhere.

Every site in the network has an about page that reads (in part):

About Satire
Before you complain and decide satire is synonymous with "comedy":

sat·ire
ˈsaˌtī(ə)r
noun
The use of humor, irony, exaggeration, or ridicule to expose and criticize people's stupidity or vices, particularly in the context of contemporary politics and other topical issues.

Everything on this website is fiction. It is not a lie and it is not fake news because it is not real. If you believe that it is real, you should have your head examined. Any similarities between this site's pure fantasy and actual people, places, and events are purely coincidental and all images should be considered altered and satirical. See above if you're still having an issue with that satire thing.

Articles from Blair's sites frequently get copied by "real" fake news sites that often omit the satire disclaimer and any other hints the stories are fake. Blair has tried to get these sites shut down, but new ones keep cropping up.

Here is a video of Blair explaining how his process works:

If you are interested in learning more about Blair and the history of his sites, here is something to get you started:

The Ultimate Christopher Blair and America's Last Line of Defense Reading List | Lead Stories

STORY UPDATED: check for updates below. Yesterday Eli Saslow at the Washington Post wrote a fantastic article about Christopher Blair, a man from Maine who has been trolling conservatives and Trump supporters online for years and occasionally even made a living out of it.

If you see one of his stories on a site that does not contain a satire disclaimer, assume it is fake news. If you do see the satire disclaimer, it is, of course, also fake news.

NewsGuard, a company that uses trained journalists to rank the reliability of websites, describes potatriotsunite.com as:

A site that publishes false stories and hoaxes that are often mistaken for real news, part of a network named America's Last Line of Defense run by hoax perpetrator Christopher Blair.

According to NewsGuard, the site does not maintain basic standards of accuracy and accountability. Read their full assessment here.

We wrote about potatriotsunite.com before; here are our most recent articles that mention the site:

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  Ryan Cooper

Ryan Cooper, a staff writer and fact-checker for Lead Stories, is the former Director of Programming at CNN International, where he helped shape the network's daily newscasts broadcast to more than 280 million households around the world. He was based at the network's Los Angeles Bureau. There, he managed the team responsible for a three-hour nightly program, Newsroom LA.

Formerly, he worked at the headquarters in Atlanta, and he spent four years at the London bureau. An award-winning producer, Cooper oversaw the network's Emmy Award-winning coverage of the uprising in Egypt in 2011. He also served as a supervising producer during much of the network's live reporting on the Israel-Hezbollah conflict in 2006, for which CNN received an Edward R. Murrow Award.

Read more about or contact Ryan Cooper

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