Donald Trump has vowed to sue South African comedian Trevor Noah after a barbed joke at the 68th Grammy Awards linked him to disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein, turning a celebratory music night into a politically charged standoff that ricocheted across social media.
The confrontation highlights how live entertainment has become a frontline in America’s culture wars, coming just days after millions of Epstein-related court documents were unsealed and as Trump continues to battle claims about his past ties to the financier.
Moments after Billie Eilish won Song of the Year for Wildflower, Noah steered the ceremony from glitter to geopolitics.
Addressing the star-studded audience in Los Angeles, he quipped that the Grammy was ‘almost as much as Trump wants Greenland’, referencing the president’s earlier threats to seize the autonomous Arctic territory.
He then delivered the line that triggered the backlash: ‘Which makes sense because, since Epstein’s gone, he needs a new island to hang out with Bill Clinton.’
Laughter in the hall was mixed with audible discomfort. Within minutes, the clip was trending worldwide, drawing condemnation from Trump’s supporters and sparking fierce debate online.
Trump responded swiftly on Truth Social in an all-caps tirade that blended legal threat with personal insult.
‘I can’t speak for Bill, but I have never been to Epstein Island, nor anywhere close, and until tonight’s false and defamatory statement, have never been accused of being there,’ he wrote.
Branding Noah a ‘total loser’ and a ‘talentless dope of an M.C.’, Trump added: ‘I’ll be sending my lawyers to sue this poor, pathetic man. Get ready, Noah — I’m going to have some fun with you!’
White House officials declined to confirm whether formal legal papers had been filed, but sources told AFP that advisers were reviewing potential defamation claims.
The clash arrives just days after more than three million pages of Epstein-related court records were released, naming prominent figures including Bill Clinton, Elon Musk, Bill Gates and Britain’s former prince Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor.
Trump has spent months resisting parts of the disclosure and has offered differing explanations about his past relationship with Epstein, with whom he once moved in overlapping social circles in Florida and New York.
While Trump has acknowledged knowing Epstein socially, he has repeatedly denied ever visiting the financier’s private Caribbean island — the very suggestion Noah evoked on stage.
Noah had already announced that 2025 would be his final year hosting the Grammys after six consecutive ceremonies, the longest run in the show’s history.
In previous years he largely avoided overt political jabs. Sunday’s remarks marked a sharper turn, ensuring his swansong will be remembered as much for controversy as comedy.
The Recording Academy said only that the awards ‘celebrate artistic freedom and creative expression’, declining to comment directly on Trump’s threat.
Legal analysts say any defamation suit would face significant hurdles in US courts, where satire and opinion enjoy broad First Amendment protection — particularly in live comedy settings.
‘Presidents are public figures, and awards shows are understood as spaces for exaggeration,’ one media lawyer told AFP. ‘That makes successful litigation difficult.’
Still, the episode underscores how entertainment, politics and social media now collide in real time, turning a single joke into a global dispute over reputation and power.











