Stephen Colbert Mocks MAGA Over Trump Phone Fine Print

Trump phone – Stephen Colbert roasted MAGA supporters over deposits for Trump’s T1 Phone, as updated terms suggest it may never ship.
Stephen Colbert didn’t hold back in his latest monologue, taking aim at MAGA supporters who put down money for a Trump-branded phone that may never reach customers—at least not under the updated terms now posted for the device.
Speaking during Tuesday’s installment of “The Late Show,” Colbert focused on what he called the “bad and funny” side of the internet’s latest tech tease: the “T1 Phone,” introduced last summer through Trump Mobile, and promoted with a premium-looking, gold design.
Colbert explained why viewers should pay close attention to the fine print. pointing out that the site’s updated language now suggests there is no guarantee the phone will be commercially released or that the necessary regulatory approvals will be secured.. In Colbert’s telling. that kind of broad caveat helps explain why so many buyers may feel misled—especially after the phone drew major attention during its original rollout.
He revisited last summer’s announcement. telling audiences the hype centered on a $499 gold Trump-branded device presented as being “handsomely styled” in a way that landed as both absurd and memorable in comedy terms.. Colbert also recirculated his earlier jokes from when the phone first debuted. including a clip where he highlighted the website’s decision to put “T1 Phone” in quotation marks.
Meanwhile, Colbert returned to his own punchline about what the T1 Phone could turn into if expectations didn’t match reality. He argued that customers, in effect, weren’t just waiting for a product—they were being sold a promise without any certainty the promise would materialize.
Back in the studio. Colbert said the joke at the time “wasn’t fair. ” because customers are now “not getting hash browns. ” which in his metaphor translated to a broader point: “you’re not getting anything.” He framed the updated terms as a reality check to the supporters who had gotten swept up in the excitement.
Colbert then pivoted to the scale of the pre-orders. noting reports that around 600. 000 people placed $100 deposits back in June of 2025. after the phone was announced by Trump’s sons. Don Jr.. and Eric.. For Colbert. that amount of enthusiasm—paired with updated language that undercuts delivery certainty—was the setup for his sharpest mockery.
He went further in his critique of those who put money down. portraying it as an especially humiliating outcome: supporters. he said. didn’t even end up “getting scammed by the top Trump. ” but instead being “bamboozled” by his “babies.” Colbert likened the situation to a familiar comedy scenario—an exaggerated comparison to being shaken down by one relative while everyone assumes they’re dealing with someone else.
The comedian also underscored the emotional reaction to the update. stating that “people are hella pissed.” He played a heated response from a Trump supporter reacting to the news about the fine print. aligning the audience’s attention with the frustration now spreading among those who had backed the product.
Beyond the jokes, the episode highlights how quickly consumer tech expectations can shift when promotional language meets legal wording.. When disclaimers broaden enough to remove guarantees around shipment and approvals. supporters who treated the launch as imminent may end up feeling that the deal was never as dependable as it looked.
Colbert’s monologue ultimately turned the T1 Phone story into a cautionary tale about deposits, timelines, and what “may” and “no guarantee” can mean in practice—especially when branding and hype do much of the selling long before regulatory questions are answered.
“The Late Show With Stephen Colbert” airs weeknights at 11:35 p.m. ET on CBS, and the full monologue was shared online for viewers who want to hear the remarks in context.
Stephen Colbert The Late Show Trump Mobile T1 Phone MAGA supporters pre-orders fine print