AL-UDEID AIR BASE, Qatar (AP) â When President addressed U.S. and Qatari troops at a military base in Qatar on Thursday, he assured the rank and file that âwe donât care if youâre politically correct.â
Anyone needing proof of that could have watched comedian Theo Vonâs routine just a little earlier. Wearing a black T-shirt and backward baseball cap, the podcast host regaled the uniformed troops with jokes about drugs, developmental disabilities, homosexuality and their Qatari hosts.
He talked about snorting cocaine off a babyâs back but said it was âa mixed babyâ so the white powder was visible on the baby's skin.
Von acted out various disabilities, including Down syndrome, and he insulted the U.S. Navy as âgay.â He also had a punchline about terrorism attacks, asking, âWhere do you think the next 9/11 should happen?â
He joked about the lack of crime in Qatar, where he said it would be impossible to identify a perpetrator because everyone is named Mohammed and dresses in the same white robes. They were like a âKu Klux Sandsman," Von said.
He later pointed to the Qatari troops in the audience and said âthey donât like me.â
The jokes drew laughter and some groans from the service members at the base, home to the forward headquarters of the U.S. militaryâs Central Command.
There was no acknowledgment from Qatar about the comedy routine and its topics. U.S. and Qatari service members and a small number of journalists following Trump heard the set, which was also available to American television networks.
The wealthy Gulf nations that have increasingly welcomed at home and acts from abroad as they promote themselves as global entertainment destinations, and there are fewer red lines than one might expect in the socially conservative region. When Russell Peters performed in Saudi Arabia and last year, both told a number of sexually explicit jokes and playfully mocked aspects of local culture, like the heavy reliance on foreign workers.
The only no-go zones appear to be criticism of Islam or the countriesâ autocratic rulers.
âYou canât talk about the royals, and you canât talk about religion,â comedian Tom Segura said on his podcast last year, describing restrictions imposed on a comedy tour he made to the United Arab Emirates.
Von connected with Trump during , hosting the Republican candidate for an extended conversation that helped him reach young male voters who were .
Trump wasnât present for Vonâs routine at the al-Udeid Air Base, which houses about 8,000 troops. When Trump took the stage in a hangar on the Qatari side of the installation, he praised Von and talked about how his son Barron encouraged him to sit down with the comedian.
âDad, youâve got to do an interview with a guy named Theo Von,â Trump said. âI said, âWho the hell is Theo Von?ââ
âWe had a good time,â he added.
This isnât the first time a warm-up act has stirred controversy for Trump. Comedian Tony Hinchcliffe called Puerto Rico during a Madison Square Garden rally near the end of the campaign.
Trump delivered his own free-wheeling remarks during Thursday's event, telling the troops that âI have nothing else to do, so letâs have a little fun.â
He talked about plans for an upcoming military parade in Washington, falsely said that he , joked about people who want him to run for another term and said France would be âspeaking Germanâ if it wasnât for American help during World War II.
Trump talked about his administrationâs efforts to thin the militaryâs top ranks, saying âwe let a lot of four-stars go.â
Thereâs long been friction between Trump and some top generals, and heâs been more emboldened to remake the command structure.
He described people who doubted his military instincts as âfreaking losers,â talking up the campaign against the Islamic State group in his first term.
Trump ended his speech in his customary way, dancing to his campaign anthem of âYMCA.â
Vonâs âThis Past Weekendâ is the fifth-most-popular podcast in the U.S. among weekly podcast listeners age 13 or older, according to recent rankings from Edison Podcast Metrics. The mullet-sporting 45-year-old is one of the burgeoning voices of , a rising online community of hyper-masculine influencers and comedians who rebuff cancel culture and offer crudeness in its place. Von has interviewed people across the political spectrum and in industries from artificial intelligence to entertainment and sports.
____ Megerian reported from Washington. AP writer Joseph Krauss contributed to this report.
Zeke Miller And Chris Megerian, The Associated Press