
Tesla protesters take aim at Musk's retro-style diner with Nazi-styled balloons — even as lines stretch around the block
Tall inflatable balloons designed to look like Musk, in Tesla-branded T-shirts and black MAGA hats, mimicked the Nazi salute while protesters chanted: 'Hey hey, ho ho, Elon Musk has got to go!'
In videos posted to social media, one demonstrator can be seen splayed across the front of a Cybertruck and flipping the bird in an attempt to deter customers from driving into the diner's parking lot.
Advertisement
4 Protesters outside the Tesla diner on Sunday.
ZUMAPRESS.com
Fans of Musk showed up in full force, too, with one customer on YouTube claiming he waited 11 hours for the restaurant to open.
Easily more than 20 vehicles can be seen backed up around the block in a video online as customers waited to order, while reports from last week described lines at least 100 people long.
Advertisement
For months, Musk has faced outrage from protesters at Tesla dealerships across the country following his severe government funding cuts.
About 75 protesters gathered on Saturday at the 24-hour Tesla diner, which abruptly opened last week after years of Musk touting his vision for an 'old school drive-in, roller skates & rock restaurant.'
Electric-vehicle charging stations wrap around the parking lot of the Tesla diner, which has a front door that looks like a glowing portal and neon red stripes atop the building.
Advertisement
4 Elon Musk's Tesla diner abruptly opened last week.
GC Images
Tesla's Optimus humanoid robots filled cartons with fresh popcorn at the opening, while customers were served burgers in Cybertruck boxes and $12 maple-glazed bacon.
There's a wraparound balcony on the top deck of the diner with tables and chairs where customers can enjoy dinner and a movie, as a large screen in the parking lot plays full-length films each night.
Advertisement
But protesters are hopeful that the buzz around the diner and drive-in theater will die down.
'This is the world's most renowned anti-trans advocate who just opened a diner in West Hollywood. The community is not very supportive of Elon,' Joel Lava, who led the protests at the diner, told CNN.
While attendance at the Tesla Takedown protesters peaked in March, the demonstrations have still 'been going strong,' Lava said.
4 Demonstrators carried signs and chanted outside the Tesla diner.
ZUMAPRESS.com
As of Monday, the Tesla Takedown site listed 45 upcoming protests.
'Our main message is Tesla funds facism. Elon Musk, via DOGE, has destroyed our government agencies and people's jobs, and people are dying around the world because of him,' Lava added.
The Tesla brand has already endured significant brand damage from the protests, he said.
Last week, the automaker reported its worst sales drop in a decade and earnings that missed Wall Street estimates.
Advertisement
4 The retro-futuristic interior of the new Tesla diner.
APEX / MEGA
Tesla has also been steadily losing overseas market share to Chinese rivals, like EV maker BYD.
But executives at the company have focused on the future of the company during earnings calls, boasting about its Optimus humanoid robots and robotaxis.
Advertisement
These opportunities, however, are pricey and risky bets, and it's expected that Tesla will soon feel more pain from President Trump's tariffs and the end of federal EV tax credits.
The stock is down more than 15% so far this year, while most tech stocks and the Nasdaq have been on an upward tear.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Boston Globe
an hour ago
- Boston Globe
Putin widens effort to control Russia's internet
The idea, experts say, is to migrate more Russians from an open internet dominated by the products of Western tech giants to a censored online ecosystem, where Russians primarily use software under the gaze and influence of the state. The effort has advanced significantly amid wartime repression, but it is unclear how far it will go. 'The goal here is absolute control,' said Anastasiia Kruope, a researcher at Human Rights Watch who wrote a recent report on declining Russian internet freedoms. Advertisement The Kremlin wants to control not only the information available online but also where and how internet traffic flows, Kruope said, so the Russian internet can function in isolation and be switched on and off at will. Russia's technical capabilities for clamping down are improving, she added. 'They are not perfect,' Kruope said. 'They are not nearly at the level they would like them to be. But they are getting better, and this is the reason to start paying attention.' Advertisement Unlike China, where users have been restricted since the dawn of the internet, Russia long boasted one of the most open and freewheeling environments anywhere online. Operating with virtually no barriers, millions of Russians flocked to Western tech platforms, posted critical news, and freely expressed their thoughts on the web. The Kremlin began to see that freedom as a threat, particularly after the rise of opposition activist Alexei Navalny, who died in prison last year. His exposes of the Putin elite, initially publicized in Live Journal blog posts and later in popular YouTube videos, gave him millions of followers online and the power to mobilize mass protests on the street. Since the first decade of Putin's rule, Moscow had been articulating a vision for what it called a 'sovereign' internet that would sever Russia as much as possible from the rest of the online world and strip power from foreign tech firms, which didn't always give in to the Kremlin's demands. But Putin's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022 gave the government the opportunity to accelerate the plan. On the eve of the invasion, the state indirectly took over VK, the country's biggest social network, harnessing a platform with millions of existing users to popularize Russian alternatives to Western tech products. The son of Putin's powerful first deputy chief of staff, Sergei V. Kiriyenko, was tapped to run the company. Moscow banned Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter outright and took steps that caused TikTok to disable functions in Russia. Lawmakers passed Draconian laws stifling free expression in the streets and online. Last year, after building out a video-streaming service on VK, Russia began throttling YouTube, pushing users toward the domestic alternative, though with mixed success. Advertisement Now, with the introduction of MAX, authorities have signaled they may take aim at foreign messaging apps, in particular WhatsApp, which is owned by Meta and counts nearly 100 million monthly users in Russia. Telegram could be a target as well. Anton V. Gorelkin, deputy head of the information technology committee in Russia's lower house of parliament, said last month that WhatsApp should 'prepare to leave the Russian market.' He said Russians would replace the app with MAX. At an economic forum in June, Gorelkin also called Telegram, based in the United Arab Emirates and owned by Russian-born internet entrepreneur Pavel Durov, 'an entity that worries the state.' But he said previously that the app would not be banned. 'I am very afraid that other methods of communication are going to be blocked,' said Mikhail Klimarev, head of the Internet Protection Society, an exiled Russian digital-rights group. Beyond messaging, Telegram allows Russians access to content from exiled journalists, activists, and artists, who post in channels. At the same time, the Kremlin uses Telegram to distribute its own propaganda, giving the app a chance of survival. Klimarev said a Telegram blockage would devastate the Russian internet. 'Russia will turn into Mordor,' he said, referring to the dark realm ruled by evil in the writings of J.R.R. Tolkien. Through MAX, Russian officials are hoping to create their own version of China's WeChat, an app that remains indispensable for millions of Chinese despite being both censored and monitored. Apart from messaging and uploading posts, WeChat users can pay utility bills, book train tickets, make payments for goods and services, apply for marriage licenses, and in some places even file for divorce. Advertisement Moscow is following that model. A new law says government services must be offered through MAX. Officials across all levels of Russian government are being told to install the app. Already, local authorities have been testing the use of MAX by schools and signaling that teachers will be required to use it to communicate with students and parents. 'You need to bring it into the daily life of people to the extent that you cannot avoid this app anymore,' said Philipp Dietrich, an analyst at the German Council on Foreign Relations. 'The whole point of doing this is the same reason China is doing WeChat: the more information you can gather against your citizens, the better,' Dietrich added. This article originally appeared in


New York Post
3 hours ago
- New York Post
Trump praises Sydney Sweeney after learning she's a registered Republican as woke mob torches her American Eagle jeans ad
He's tipping his red cap. President Trump on Sunday praised Sydney Sweeney after learning she's a registered Republican – a political bombshell that dropped as a woke mob continues to torch the actress over her American Eagle jeans ad. Trump, 79, reacted with glee after a reporter told him the 27-year-old 'Euphoria' actress shares his right-leaning views, adding that he now finds her controversial new denim campaign 'fantastic.' Advertisement 5 President Trump praised Sydney Sweeney after learning she's a registered Republican. AP 'Oh, now I love her ad,' he told a gaggle of reporters before boarding Air Force One in Allentown, Pa. 'You'd be surprised at how many people are Republicans. That's one I wouldn't have known but I'm glad you told me that. 'If Sydney Sweeny is a registered Republican, I think her ad is fantastic.' Advertisement 5 Sydney Sweeney, 27, has faced relentless backlash ignited by lefty critics over her new American Eagle jeans ad. American Eagle The 'White Lotus' starlet has been registered with the Republican Party of Florida in Monroe County since June 2024, according to public voter records viewed by The Post. The blonde-haired, blue-eyed actress's conservative stripes were revealed Saturday as she faces relentless backlash ignited by left-wing critics comparing the clothing retailer's sultry ad to 'Nazi propaganda' that promotes racism and eugenics. Advertisement 5 The 'Euphoria' star has been a registered Republican in Florida since June 2024. American Eagle The tagline for the marketing campaign is: 'Sydney Sweeney has great jeans.' In one promotional clip, Sweeney explains that genes are passed down from parents to offspring 'often determining traits like hair color, personality and even eye color,' before declaring, 'my jeans are blue.' In another clever ad, the actress approaches a billboard featuring her image and the phrase, 'Sydney Sweeney has great genes,' which she then alters by crossing out 'genes' and replacing it with 'jeans.' Advertisement 5 The ad sparked debate over 'Nazi propaganda,' racism and eugenics. American Eagle The campaign sparked a social media frenzy this week over Western beauty standards and race, prompting American Eagle to defend its marketing approach and the 'Anyone But You' star. Other White House officials have also come out mocking the outraged liberal haters, including Steven Cheung, Trump's communications director, who on Tuesday dragged the bizarre backlash as 'cancel culture run amok.' Vice President JD Vance also ripped Democrats for becoming unhinged over a 'pretty girl' selling jeans to kids in America. 5 Sydney Sweeney in an American Eagle jeans ad. 'My political advice to the Democrats is: continue to tell everybody who thinks Sydney Sweeney is attractive that they're a Nazi,' Vance said on Friday's episode of the 'Ruthless' podcast. 'That appears to be their actual strategy. So you have a pretty girl doing a jeans ad and they can't help but freak out. It reveals a lot more about them than it does us.' Sweeney herself has yet to respond to the public reaction.


New York Post
4 hours ago
- New York Post
Pope Leo XIV rallies 1M youths in Rome, calling them ‘the sign a different world is possible'
Pope Leo XIV rallied more than a million young Catholics on Sunday, urging them to embrace peace and calling them 'the sign that a different world is possible.' The Chicago-born pontiff delivered the powerful message at a colossal Mass southeast of Rome, capping the Vatican's weeklong 'Jubilee of Youth' celebration — drawing teens and young adults from over 150 countries. 3 Leo spoke to hordes of the young faithful at a Sunday Mass southeast of Rome. 'We are closer than ever to young people who suffer the most serious evils, which are caused by other human beings,' Leo said in his blessing. 'We are with the young people of Gaza. We are with the young people of Ukraine, with those of every land bloodied by war,' he said. Leo spoke to hordes of the young faithful, many of whom camped overnight Saturday after attending a vigil, also presided by him. 'My young brothers and sisters, you are the sign that a different world is possible. A world of fraternity and friendship, where conflicts are not resolved with weapons, but with dialogue.' The event also drew in 7,000 priests and 450 bishops alongside the 1 million youth, the Vatican said. 3 The event drew in 7,000 priests and 450 bishops alongside the 1 million youth, the Vatican said. Matteo Nardone/ The week was marked by bands of youths singing hymns as they moved down cobblestoned streets and standing for hours in line at the Circus Maximus for confession in a dozen languages. The Pope urged the young people to 'spread your enthusiasm and the witness of your faith,' when they return to their home countries. 'Aspire to great things, to holiness, wherever you are,' Leo said. 'Do not settle for less. You will then see the light of the Gospel growing every day, in you and around you.' The pontiff also revealed that two young people making the pilgrimage to Rome had died during the week, and a third was hospitalized. One reportedly died of cardiac arrest, while it wasn't immediately clear how the second perished. 3 'My young brothers and sisters, you are the sign that a different world is possible. A world of fraternity and friendship, where conflicts are not resolved with weapons, but with dialogue,' Pope Leo XIV told the youth. Matteo Nardone/ Still, spirits were high during the gathering — even as rain dampened much of the crowd waiting for the Mass. 'At least we were a little covered, but we still got a bit wet. We lost our voices a little. It was cold, but we woke up to a beautiful sun and view,' said Soemil Rios, 20, from Puerto Rico. 'Despite the difficulties, it was very nice and very special to have been part of this historic moment.' The next youth gathering with the pope will be on World Youth Day, set for Aug. 3-8, 2027, in Seoul, South Korea. With Post wires