Some nights, the internet is quiet. Other nights, it feels like someone dropped a firecracker into a comment section and walked away.
The night of May 11 into the early hours of May 12 allegedly belonged to the second category.
According to widely shared screenshots and online tracking chatter, a late-night posting surge unfolded across accounts associated with Donald Trump—and it was the kind of activity that had users refreshing their feeds thinking, “Wait… is this still going?”

The “Wait, How Many Posts?!” Moment
Let’s start with the number that got everyone talking: more than 50 posts and reposts in just over three hours.
Yes—three hours.
That’s not a normal posting rhythm. That’s closer to a live commentary stream where the “refresh” button never gets a break.
And what was the topic of this alleged late-night marathon? Not policy updates. Not international negotiations. Not even subtle political messaging.
Instead, the feed was reportedly dominated by intense personal political attacks aimed at Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton—with the tone quickly escalating across reposts and shared content.
Internet users, of course, reacted exactly as you’d expect:
- “Did I miss a memo?”
- “Is this a press conference or a livestream?”
- “Why is my timeline suddenly on turbo mode?”
The Post That Made Everyone Go: “Wait… WHAT?”
Among the most viral moments was a reposted claim calling for the “arrest of Obama,” using extremely dramatic language like “treason,” “sedition,” and the ever-popular internet phrase energy: “lock him up first!”
Now, to be clear, the internet has seen political exaggeration before—but this one had that special late-night chaos flavor where people aren’t sure if they’re reading commentary, outrage bait, or something that accidentally escaped containment.
Screenshots spread fast. Reactions spread faster.
One user summed it up perfectly: “This reads like a group chat argument that escalated into a national headline.”
Then Came the AI Video… Because of Course It Did
Just when things were already spiraling into “internet disbelief mode,” an AI-generated video allegedly entered the chat.
The clip showed Barack Obama in handcuffs being led away—visually realistic enough to make some viewers pause for a double-take, but clearly synthetic to anyone paying close attention.
Still, in today’s internet ecosystem, “clearly fake” doesn’t always mean “clearly harmless.”
It meant:
- reposted instantly
- debated endlessly
- and dissected frame-by-frame like a political crime documentary trailer
The vibe? Somewhere between satire, confusion, and digital chaos.
50 Posts in 3 Hours Feels… Personal
Online observers quickly started doing the math: 50+ posts in roughly 180 minutes.
That’s basically one post every few minutes, like a treadmill that never slows down.
Some described it as a “posting spiral,” others called it a “late-night content storm,” and a few more poetic users went with: “the feed that refused to sleep.”
The content itself reportedly swung between reposts, reactions, and highly charged political commentary, creating a nonstop scroll of intensity that had the internet collectively clutching its popcorn.
Comey’s Reaction: The Line That Went Viral
Of course, no internet frenzy is complete without a reaction clip.
Enter James Comey, who, when asked about the overnight activity on TV, delivered a remark that instantly became meme material:
“He doesn’t look right… man, you look like you’re going crazy.”
And just like that, the internet did what it does best—turned it into a quote of the day, a reaction GIF idea, and probably someone’s phone wallpaper by lunchtime.
Why Did This Blow Up So Fast?
Because everything happened at once.
A high-volume posting burst.
Two major political figures repeatedly referenced.
AI-generated imagery that blurred reality.
And a late-night timing window where the internet is at its most reactive and least restrained.
Put all of that together and you don’t get a standard news cycle—you get a digital soap opera unfolding in real time.
Analysts even noted that recurring keywords like “arrest claims,” “Obama posts,” and “AI video” started clustering across discussions, making up a noticeable slice of conversation patterns (estimated around 6% in early tracking summaries).
But honestly, most users weren’t thinking in percentages.
They were just thinking: “This feed is unhinged tonight.”
The Morning After Glow
By sunrise, things slowed down. The posting storm eased. The internet took a breath.
But screenshots? Still everywhere.
Debates? Still ongoing.
AI video discussions? Absolutely not finished.
Because if there’s one thing the internet loves more than chaos, it’s replaying chaos.
And this late-night episode had all the ingredients:
- volume
- drama
- political names
- and just enough confusion to keep everyone talking
Final Gossip-Style Take
Was it a statement? A spiral? A strategy? Or just another example of how fast online attention can snowball at 3AM?
Nobody really agrees.
But one thing is certain: that night, the internet didn’t scroll—it raced.







