A potential Supreme Court ruling could redefine presidential power over federal agencies like the FCC—raising questions about Trump-era pressure on broadcasters, media freedom, and whether your nightly news might soon come with a MAGA watermark.
Despite Donald Trump’s ongoing feud with Jimmy Kimmel, Ted Cruz has remained conspicuously silent in 2025. This satirical essay explores Cruz’s strategic non-response, the political dynamics behind it, and imagines what might happen if Cruz ever stepped into the late-night spotlight.
Elon Musk reportedly gave employees a 48-hour deadline for a major assignment, sparking backlash, burnout, and a flurry of Slack messages that read like panic attacks in emoji form. Here’s the satirical breakdown of what happens when your billionaire boss thinks he’s directing a Marvel movie.
In 2025, the Anime Pirate Flag has gone from niche meme to global street symbol. This satirical essay fact-checks its origins, tracks verified sightings and explores the cultural chaos behind the viral flag that’s part cosplay, part protest, and all confusion.
Let’s talk about the FCC—the Federal Communications Commission. You know, the folks who regulate everything from your grandma’s ham radio to your cousin’s conspiracy podcast. In 2025, the FCC is either protecting democracy or remixing the Constitution like it’s a SoundCloud track. Let’s dive in.
A federal judge ruled the Trump administration unlawfully directed mass terminations of U.S. workers. We break down the facts, the fallout, and the farce — with a side of satire.
Leaked emails allegedly show Jeffrey Epstein told Ghislaine Maxwell to remove Donald Trump’s name from a “power list.” But is it real? We break down the facts, the fiction, and the satire behind the latest twist in the Epstein saga.
In 2025, the U.S. economy is throwing curveballs like it’s trying out for the Yankees, but America’s biggest corporations are acting like it’s just another Monday. Why the hush-hush? Let’s decode the silence, fact-check the spin, and throw in some data that even your conspiracy-theorist uncle can’t argue with.
No, Mark Zuckerberg didn’t sue himself—but the internet sure wanted him to. We fact-check the viral headline and dive into a satirical courtroom where Zuck faces off against… Zuck. Spoiler: the judge is an AI trained on Reddit.