The Epstein–Trump story made a thunderous return to the national spotlight after House Democrats released a small batch of emails written by Jeffrey Epstein referencing his supposed “BFF,” Donald Trump. Republicans, in an ill-fated attempt to counter the move, responded by dumping 20,000 pages of Epstein-related documents into the public sphere—effectively turning a spark into a bonfire.

New twist in Trump–Epstein saga as leaked emails surface in US Congress -  YouTube

As one commentator joked, this is “the downside of your people really having your back,” because instead of burying the story, the GOP amplified it into a saga of operatic proportions. Trying to hide a scandal by adding 20,000 pages, the segment quipped, is like “trying to hide pissing yourself by shitting yourself.”

And yet, here we are.

A Strange Mix of Bromance, Betrayal & Bizarre Emails

Far from containing only incriminating evidence, much of the material consists of strange, uncomfortable, and downright absurd exchanges between Epstein and Trump about their dating histories, social circles, and shared acquaintances.

One of the most disturbing claims from Epstein:
He allegedly had photos of Trump with young women “in bikinis in my kitchen.”

He also claimed that he and Trump had dated the same woman in the 1990s—referring to her as his “20-year-old girlfriend… that I gave to Donald.” The audience’s reaction said everything: a collective groan.

Just to add another layer of surrealism, the woman believed to be referenced was identified as a Norwegian cosmetics heiress named Celina Midelfart—a name the segment relentlessly mocked as sounding like an emergency cover-up identity a spy might blurt out under pressure.

Midelfart denied ever dating either man.
Honestly, who could blame her?

Epstein-Trump Saga Gets 20K Pages Longer & Megyn Kelly Splits Hairs on  Pedophilia | The Daily Show

Epstein’s Post-Friendship Trash-Talk About Trump

The documents also reveal that Epstein had no shortage of insults for Trump once their friendship fractured. He described Trump as:

“borderline insane”

“effing crazy”

possibly suffering “early dementia”

“gross”

and “worse in real life and up close”

Receiving this kind of character assessment from Epstein—a convicted sex offender—creates an uncomfortable paradox. If a pedophile calls you disgusting, that’s bad. If a pedophile calls you a good hang, that’s worse. Either way, it’s a lose-lose scenario.

The Nose-Print Incident

One of the more ridiculous emails claims Trump once got so distracted watching young women swim in Epstein’s pool that he walked nose-first into a glass door.

A Deep Dive Into Trump's History with Epstein Pt. 2 | The Daily Show -  YouTube

That story spawned its own viral punchline:
If Trump were truly aroused, the first body part hitting the glass shouldn’t have been his nose.

Republican Media Attempts to Spin the Story Crash and Burn

While GOP lawmakers struggled with damage control, right-leaning media outlets attempted to dismiss the revelations as:

“a distraction”

“all for show”

“selective cherry-picking”

“ridiculous”

“played out”

But calling the Epstein scandal “played out” is a wild take—even for sensationalist TV. When the media that thrives on drama suddenly wants to talk about budget cuts instead of a global sex-trafficking conspiracy, something has gone very wrong.

Megyn Kelly’s Pedophilia Hair-Splitting Goes Off the Rails

Then came the moment that shocked even the live audience:
Megyn Kelly attempted to “clarify” the nature of Epstein’s crimes by saying he wasn’t into “eight-year-olds,” but rather “very young teens,” adding:

“There’s a difference between a 15-year-old and a 5-year-old.”

The crowd recoiled.

The monologue’s response was devastating:
There is never a good reason to be casually comparing levels of pedophilia.
The absurdity of Kelly’s logic prompted the joke:
“Your Honor, my client only engaged in diet pedophilia.”

Daily Show' Host Has 1 Question For Megyn Kelly After She Argues Epstein  Wasn't That Bad - Yahoo News Canada

The Grammar Crimes of Jeffrey Epstein

In a hilarious twist, correspondent Troy Iwata took aim not at Epstein’s sex crimes—everyone already agrees on those—but at his grammar.
He roasted Epstein’s bafflingly chaotic punctuation:

misplaced quotation marks

random hyphens

nonsense phrases

“hawain tropic contest”

and the unforgettable “period slash.”

Iwata sarcastically asked whether Epstein used a “pedophile keyboard” or simply typed by shaking his laptop inside a bag. His exasperation culminated in:

“He doesn’t know how to spell ‘Hawaii’? Jeffrey, kill yourself.”

When reminded Epstein already had, Iwata simply replied:
“Good.”

The Final Serious Note (Sort Of)

Despite the comedic chaos, Iwata concluded with a surprisingly earnest message:
America’s literacy crisis is real. And if future criminals are inevitable, the least the country can do is ensure they can spell properly when they commit crimes.

It was meant as satire—but the point landed:
This scandal is about far more than emails.
It’s about power, corruption, impunity, and a political ecosystem that keeps trying—and failing—to bury the truth.

The Epstein case is uniting Americans and causing problems for Trump.  Here's why | Opinion - Yahoo News Canada

Conclusion

The 20,000-page Epstein document dump has backfired spectacularly, reigniting debates about Trump’s connection to Epstein, drawing renewed scrutiny to the case, and exposing a mess of grotesque, bizarre, and occasionally comically incompetent behavior.

Republicans tried to make the story disappear.
Instead, they made it 20,000 pages longer.