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Fact Check: Melania Trump didn't sue 'The View' for $900M over host Sunny Hostin's comments

Fact Check: Melania Trump didn't sue 'The View' for $900M over host Sunny Hostin's comments

Yahoo11-02-2025
Claim:
First lady Melania Trump filed and won a $900 million lawsuit against daytime talk show "The View."
Rating:
A rumor spread online in early 2025 that U.S. first lady Melania Trump sued daytime talk show "The View" and won $900 million. Some posts making the claim specified that the alleged lawsuit was based on comments the show's co-host Sunny Hostin made about Trump's marriage to U.S. President Donald Trump.
https://www.facebook.com/michael.craft.10441/posts/pfbid02YVB4WpaBYRDkWtj9RC2mkCcKCUW6tVEdtLiQ5PBkrnJ4aoRX6ePKFJftRpaQ47gul
The claim originated as a video on YouTube posted on Feb. 1. A three-part video of the same footage later appeared on TikTok, where it received more than 3.8 million views collectively.
However, Melania Trump did not sue Hostin. The claims that she did were fictional, designed to gain views and spur reactions online.
The fictional video spread to other accounts on YouTube and X in slightly altered forms, garnering hundreds of thousands of views. Many users in the comments appeared to believe the claim, while others expressed skepticism.
One YouTube video voice-over claimed: "Sunny Hostin, in her usual smug, self-righteous style, decided to psychoanalyze Melania on live television. She claimed, without a shred of evidence, that Melania hated her husband, Donald Trump, and only stayed with him for financial gain."
Hostin has made headlines for real comments she made about the Trumps' marriage on "The View." For example, in an October 2024 episode in which the hosts discussed Melania Trump's stance on the overturning of Roe v. Wade, Hostin said, referring to the first couple, "I think she hates him."
A Google search for the terms "Melania Trump," "lawsuit," and "The View" only turned up results regarding the false claim. No credible news outlets have reported that such a lawsuit exists.
Asked about the claim, a spokesperson for "The View" told fact-checking site Lead Stories via email: "This is not true."
While some of the accounts that shared the video included disclaimers in the video description clarifying that the content shared may not be true, others did not, despite the claim being misinformation.
The clips used in the original Feb. 1 YouTube video were real footage that the video's creator edited and arranged to appear as evidence of the false claim. For example, the part of the video in which Melania Trump says "you need to defend yourself all the time" came from a 2016 interview with CNN's Anderson Cooper.
Some elements of certain posts, such as the editing, voice-over and description of a Feb. 2 YouTube video, suggested the content may have been at least partially generated using artificial intelligence software. The video included a watermark crediting AI editing and voice-over software CapCut.
The description of that video also contained inconsistencies that a human writer was unlikely to make. For example, it claimed Melania Trump sued for both $900 million and $100 million and contained the hashtag "#MelGibson" although there was no mention of the actor in the video.
Melania Trump did win around $2.9 million in a 2017 settlement with the Daily Mail, which had falsely claimed she "provided services beyond simply modeling" before marrying Trump.
However, there was no evidence that she filed a lawsuit against "The View." For this reason, we rate this claim false.
Fact Check: Melania Trump Did NOT Win A $900M Defamation Lawsuit Against 'The View' | Lead Stories. 3 Feb. 2025, https://leadstories.com/hoax-alert/2025/02/fact-check-melania-trump-did-not-win-a-900-million-defamation-lawsuit-against-the-view.html.
'Melania Trump Wins Damages from Daily Mail Publisher'. AP News, 12 Apr. 2017, https://apnews.com/article/aa13a896b28e44648aacb89b9af26c20.
'"The View": Sunny Hostin Thinks Melania Trump "Hates" Donald and "Wants to Take Him Out" With New Abortion Rights Video'. Yahoo Entertainment, 3 Oct. 2024, https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/view-sunny-hostin-thinks-melania-162843875.html.
- YouTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VMYxdwQ57Pc. Accessed 4 Feb. 2025.
- YouTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xw4yICzziF0. Accessed 4 Feb. 2025
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The future of golf isn't just players; creators (and their cameras) are here too
The future of golf isn't just players; creators (and their cameras) are here too

Yahoo

time15 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

The future of golf isn't just players; creators (and their cameras) are here too

ATLANTA — I saw the future of golf Wednesday afternoon on the East Lake Golf Club putting green. There, 2019 Open champion Shane Lowry and Ryder Cup hero Tommy Fleetwood lined up their last putts before the Tour Championship begins on Thursday. Just a few feet away from them, a handful of YouTube creators, podcasters and influencers — each with their own camera crew — milled about, reading putts and pacing before their own tee times. Wednesday marked the fourth installment of the Creator Classic, a PGA Tour-developed, YouTube-sponsored event pitting 12 of the best-known golf creators against one another in a nine-hole made-for-YouTube event, on the exact same course the pros will play in their season-ending tournament this week. A few steps away from the putting green, three of the stars of the 'Good Good Golf' YouTube channel (1.93 million subscribers) walked toward the first tee for their 3:54 p.m. tee time. 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But the rise of cheap video capabilities and easy distribution created a third class: fans who play for other fans. Golf 'influencers' and 'content creators' — purists may cringe at the terms, but they're the ones that fit — play some variant of the game in front of literal millions of fans, demythologizing and democratizing a game that's been defined by its gatekeeping rather than its inclusivity. Wednesday's Creator Classic is the fourth installment of the series that began last year at East Lake, a creation born after the Tour recognized just how much Tour-adjacent work that creators were already doing — player interviews, analysis, even tournaments of their own. East Lake makes for a perfect The Tour Championship provided an unconventional, but ideal opportunity — with only 30 players in the field, the course was largely clear by Wednesday afternoon. (Scheffler, Lowry and Fleetwood notwithstanding.) 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'My fans like to see my friends and I just bantering, talking nonsense,' said Luke Kwon (379,000 subscribers), winner of the 2024 East Lake Creators Classic. 'I think we tend to act like how they act. There's so much comedy that golf sometimes gets pushed to the side.' Others seek to set an example and open doors for people traditionally excluded from the golf world. 'You don't have to be from the best area, the best circumstances to find a place in this game,' Roger Steele (232,000 Instagram followers) said. 'I think that there's opportunities for everybody. You meet good people, and good people will do good things for you.' The twelve creators invited to play on Thursday represent a diverse group of interests and demographics. (Well, not age-wise. Most appeared to fit comfortably in the millennial/elder-Gen Z demo. There were no 65-year-old Boomers or precocious Gen Alphas in the mix. Maybe next year.) Some were here for the competition, some for the fashion, some for the laughs. 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'To not be crap.' Haven't we all felt that way, every single round? (For the record, Finch would go on to finish at +6, two strokes out of last place.) In a very real way, the creators are the viewer's avatar, and that's what makes them compelling viewing — it's not hard to imagine ourselves in that spot, and not hard to wonder how we'd do trying to clear the waters of East Lake. (Answer: probably not well.) 'They're getting to play the course inside the ropes, and the full broadcast and all the production, but they're just as excited to see these guys play the course [Thursday] and all through the weekend,' said Chad Mumm, one of the creators of Netflix's 'Full Swing' and president of Pro Shop, a studio that develops original content like the Creator Classic. 'It's just so important for cultivating a healthy future for the fan base of the tour … The internet seems to be in love with what we're doing, and the engagement's been really good.' 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‘Nicest judge in the world' Frank Caprio dies hours after sharing his final video
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timean hour ago

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‘Nicest judge in the world' Frank Caprio dies hours after sharing his final video

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"I Feel Like This Is Unlocking A New Level Of Adulthood": Millions Of People Are Absolutely Losing Their Minds Over This Man's Time-Saving Laundry Hack
"I Feel Like This Is Unlocking A New Level Of Adulthood": Millions Of People Are Absolutely Losing Their Minds Over This Man's Time-Saving Laundry Hack

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timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

"I Feel Like This Is Unlocking A New Level Of Adulthood": Millions Of People Are Absolutely Losing Their Minds Over This Man's Time-Saving Laundry Hack

A man named Armon has recently caught the attention of over five million people with a very helpful laundry hack... In his viral TikTok, Armon says, "I'm hanging up my clothes, and it just dawned on me: 'Who else hangs up their clothes like this?'" Armon then shows himself hanging a shirt on a hanger, explaining, "So, obviously, you can just grab a hanger and put it in the shirt, you know, that kind of way, right?" "I don't remember where I learned this from, but this is how I've always done it," he says as he gets ready to demonstrate a different way he hangs his shirts. Related: "I've always taken my shirt, put my arm through the left sleeve, and then out of the shirt hole." "And then you just stack them... Hold on, I'm getting somewhere with this," he adds. Armon starts adding each shirt to his arm by putting his hand through the left sleeve and out through the neck hole. Once he's got them all on his arm, he heads to his closet. "Now you have a stack of this, right? Now you just grab your hanger, hold the end, and just pop it on, and hang it up. I feel like this is so much easier than the other way," he says. Related: If you're a bit confused, Armon basically takes the hanger with the hand that is not holding the shirts, grabs it with the hand that has the shirts, and slides each shirt easily on a hanger. "I really don't remember where I learned this from, but I've always done this for, I don't know, as long as I can remember. Try it out," he concludes. You can watch Armon demonstrating this in the TikTok here. The easy hack immediately blew people's minds. It was life-changing for a lot of parents. And some even felt like it leveled up their lives as functioning adults. Armon's little trick was more than appreciated. And it motivated some people to finally finish doing their own laundry. People in retail were also very grateful to learn this. It was called revolutionary. And they felt Armon deserved some sort of prize. ...Or payment for his brilliance. It is a hack that some are even going to secretly claim they discovered themselves! BuzzFeed spoke to Armon, who said he did not expect the video to blow up like it did. "I think what surprised me the most is the amount of people reaching out thanking me, and saying how much I've changed their lives. One person in particular who lost feeling in one of their arms from a stroke reached out and said for the first time in a long time, she can hang up her clothes by herself, without needing the help from others! The other thing that surprised me was how many people don't hang their T-shirts, lol." Armon also said some people in the comments helped him remember that he first learned about this clothes-hanging trick about a decade ago from this hanger hacks YouTube video. He confirmed with confidence that this hack will definitely save you a lot of time. "After I get my clothes out of the dryer and sort of everything out, I feel like I save so much time just loading them all up on my arm and taking them straight to the closet rather than bringing hangers to the clothes, putting them on, then taking them to the closet," he added. And while everyone's been showing love for the laundry hack, Armon hopes this can create some momentum for people to discover his music, too. "As fun as it is being 'that hanger guy from TikTok,' I really want to get all the traction from this video and put it towards my music! As a small independent artist, it's hard to get recognition in such an oversaturated industry." You can check out his music here and follow Armon on TikTok and on Instagram for more! In honor of this comment, we now want to open the floor to you: Do you know an easier or quicker way to do everyday chores faster? Share your hack in the comments (with a photo or video!) and you could be featured in a follow-up post!

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