CBS News reporter Norah OβDonnell faced a wave of anger from MAGA supporters after her recent interview with President Donald Trump on 60 Minutes.
The reason? She referred to him as βMr Trumpβ instead of βPresident Trump.β
βI hate when they call him, ‘Mr Trump!’ He is the PRESIDENT. 60 Minutes doesn’t deserve to interview him – let’s see how they spin this,β one X user wrote.
OβDonnellβs interview covered a range of topics, including food insecurity in the United States amid the ongoing government shutdown and CBS Newsβ new leadership under Bari Weiss.
But many viewers could not move past the honorific.
βYou do realize that heβs the president the whole time you called him, Mr. TRUMP. You should be a little bit more humble. He just took millions from your corrupt network and you have the nerve to call him Mr. TRUMP and not Mr. PRESIDENT youβre a bunch of scumbags youβre fake news,β another X user posted.
The comment referenced Paramount Global, CBS Newsβs parent company, which paid Trump a $16 million settlement after he sued, claiming that 60 Minutes heavily edited an interview with then-Vice President Kamala Harris ahead of the 2024 election.
Despite the outrage, referring to a president by last name is not unusual. NPR has explained that it uses the βMr.β honorific on second reference for all presidents.
βAlthough many listeners find this second reference offensive, it is not a new policy. NPR has used ‘Mr.’ since the mid-1970s when President Gerald Ford was in office. The president is the only person whom NPR routinely refers to with the Mr. honorific on second reference. If NPR does a story, say on James Hamilton, an Ohio car dealer, he will be Hamilton on second reference, not Mr. Hamilton,β NPR wrote during Barack Obamaβs first term.
At the time, Democrats complained about NPR referring to Obama as βMr Obama.β Today, the complaints come from MAGA supporters, wearing red hats instead of blue.
βNo less than twice during the Trump 60 minutes interview, the narrator said MR Trump not President Trump. This is not by accident. Pay attention,β one X user wrote, adding a conspiratorial twist.
Other commenters went further. One, using the name βGina Zippi Hicks,β called OβDonnell a βdisrespectful skankβ for not using the full presidential title. Another asked why she must βundermine the presidencyβ by refusing to call Trump βPresident Trump.β
Trump himself did not comment directly on the honorific. Instead, the White House issued a statement on Monday praising the interview as a βpowerhouse interviewβ that highlighted the βmost accomplished nine months of any presidency in history.β
The episode also included discussions about the CBS network and its leadership under Bari Weiss, but it was the simple use of βMr Trumpβ that got the headlines trending.
Some observers noted the irony. A network paying millions in a legal settlement now faces outrage over one short phrase. βIt is remarkable that a two-word honorific can cause more controversy than millions of dollars changing hands,β one analyst said.
OβDonnell has not publicly responded to the backlash. CBS has maintained its editorial standard, which follows the same guidelines NPR uses.
The MAGA response highlights the intensity of loyalty to Trump and the sensitivity around any perceived slight. Some comments drifted into anger, others into humor, but the underlying frustration was clear.
Featured image via The Daily Glitch gallery







