Before he was a cartoon version of a conservative presidential candidate, Donald Trump was a cartoon version of a businessman. He's built hotels, he's built casinos, he's built apartment complexes. He's gone into the airline business, the bottled water business, the video game business, the fake university business, the steak business, the vodka business, the wine business—all the while telling people his name signaled that Trump things were the best, the classiest, the most luxurious. It's like he's living in graffiti mode on Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 3, trying to tag as much territory as he can before the time limit expires.
Trump's latest presidential campaign has turned into a pretty frightening exercise in right-wing populism, but his message wouldn't have caught on without him being able to make a basic argument: I succeed at everything, I am one of the most competitive, most profitable, and savviest businessmen on the planet, so I am the only one who can Make America Great Again.Like a lot of people, I can't quite grok the allure of the Donald. I don't just dislike his politics; I'm baffled that his brand has proved to be so enduring. Who is buying these Trump sweatshirts and Trump tie clips? Who's staying at his marble-encrusted hotels and reading his books? Who was ever watching The Apprentice and going, Yes! Yes! This angry man from the 80s has the answers! Was it possible that all this stuff was actually really, really great, and I was missing out?So I concocted a plan: I would spend an entire workweek—Monday through Friday—saturating myself in all things Trump. I'd eat only Trump-brand foods, wear only Trump-brand clothing, quench my thirst only with delicious Trump Water or Trump Wine. If I wanted to kick back, I'd kick back with Trump's books or an episode of The Apprentice. If I wanted to sleep, a Trump audiobook better be playing.Would five days of full Trump make me understand his charms? Would it sway me to his side? Could this experiment finally Make Me Great Again, turn me into the winner I always dreamed I'd be? There was only one way to find out.
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Preparation
- A case of Trump Water
- One stupid Trump hat
- One travel-sized bottle of Success by Trump cologne
- One hardback copy of The Art of the Deal
- Five plastic tubes of Trump nuts and trail mix
- One glass bottle of Trump gum balls
- Two packages of Trump-brand gummy bears, for old time's sake
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Monday
Tuesday
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Wednesday
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Tourists drifted through the lobby, basking in the afterglow of this brief and precious Trump encounter. We looked at one another and smiled, knowingly, like we were bonded together by some secret, sacred moment that we could never accurately describe again. I bought a terrible €13 Trump pan pizza and ate it in silence.
Thursday
- China
- Iran
- Climate scientists
- Obama
- China again
- "Tree huggers"
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Trump steaks are basically extinct now, but I got the next best thing: a steak sandwich from the Trump Grill. I ordered my meat burned to a crisp, since that's apparently how Donald takes his steak. Trump's recent xenophobia and race-baiting is pretty fucking heinous and all, but, my God, who cooks steak like that? It's inexcusable.That night I went out dressed in my full Trump regalia. I was waiting for someone to confront me, waiting for someone would ask me why the fuck I was dressed like this, waiting for someone to pick a fight with me, so my faith in humanity would be restored.No one did. A few people glared. One guy smiled and said, "Fuck Hillary, right?"I went home and downed another bottle of Trump Wine.
Friday
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So I threw on my Trumpiest blue suit and booked a room at the Trump Hotel.
It was there in the hotel room, that evening, on the seventh story of the Trump Hotel, with Trump slippers on my feet and a Trump towel around my waist, hair wet from a wash with Trump shampoo and soap, hand holding the last glass of Trump-branded wine, that everything finally clicked.Trump is not about hate. He's not about making America anything, or even about business. Trump's life ambition is for everyone to know that he drives the fanciest cars, dresses in the finest fabrics, beds the world's sexiest women. To be Trump is to constantly announce what a great time you're having and how expensive everything is. Even now, I can't imagine that Trump wants to be president and deal with all the headaches of governing. He wants to be George Washington because the guy's face is on a mountain, that's all. He likes the clapping and cheering and hearing his name. And I get that, I guess. I'm tickled when I see my byline online—I can't imagine the feeling of my name huge on a wall.Donald Trump is 69 years old. His trophy wives have become ex-trophy wives, his companies have grown and gone bankrupt, he's pulled himself out of the hole he was in in the early 90s. But he's still the middle boy in a five-child house, the son of a father who worked all the time and a mother obsessed with Queen Elizabeth. He's still the kid who punched his second-grade teacher, so someone would acknowledge him.And now people are! More so than ever before! They're clapping and cheering and fighting for him! He's Tinkerbell in the last act of a Peter Pan play, being brought back to life by love, or at least a reasonable approximation.I get it, I get it. I feel for you, Trump, Donald, Donny. You're a walking wound, you've got pain, and adulation takes it away. Without all the applause, you'd cease to exist. I'm also like you in some ways, to certain degrees. We're all broken and body conscious, embarrassed by hand size and dick size and thinning hairlines, grasping for places to carve our names in hopes that the words will outlive us.But come on man, come on. Stick with reality TV. Stick with hotels and buildings and Trump magazines. Don't play out your needs with America, please. If your presidency's on par, quality-wise, with your Trump-branded products, then the whole world is fucked.
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