Culture
Pulisic celebrates USMNT goal by copying Trump’s dance moves: ‘I just thought it was funny’
 
																								
												
												
											ST. LOUIS — U.S. men’s national team star Christian Pulisic became the latest professional athlete to celebrate on the field by doing the Donald Trump dance trend, moving his arms and hips similarly to the signature moves of the president-elect after scoring the opening goal in the United States’ 4-2 win over Jamaica on Monday night.
“Well obviously that’s the Trump dance,” Pulisic said when asked whether he intentionally celebrated with viral moves. “It was just a dance that everyone’s doing. He’s the one who created it. I just thought it was funny.”
Teammates Weston McKennie and Ricardo Pepi also joined Pulisic in the celebration.
Several other athletes across sports have done the viral dance in the last few days, including UFC fighter Jon Jones, with Trump ringside for his match, Las Vegas Raiders tight end Brock Bowers and several other college and NFL football players, including Tennessee Titans wide receivers Calvin Ridley and Nick Westbrook-Ikhine and Detroit Lions defensive players Za’Darius Smith and Malcolm Rodriguez.
“I saw everyone doing it yesterday in the NFL, I saw Jon Jones do it,” Pulisic said after the game. “We’re just having a bit of fun, so I thought it was a pretty fun dance.”
As the trend has taken off across sports, it’s unclear whether the celebration is a political endorsement or just a dance players think is amusing. Though Pulisic said he was only having a “bit of fun.” His celebration quickly gained attention on social media platforms, including from former U.S. men’s national team defender and Fox analyst Alexi Lalas, as well as Outkick founder Clay Travis, among others.
But the U.S. goal scorer said he wasn’t concerned with whether people on social media reacted to the dance as more than he intended.
“No, not at all,” Pulisic said. “It’s not a political dance. It was just for fun. I saw a bunch of people do it and I thought it was funny, so I enjoyed it. I hope some people did, at least.”
(Photo: Bill Barrett / Getty Images)
 
																	
																															Culture
Video: Dissecting Three Stephen King Adaptations
 
														new video loaded: Dissecting Three Stephen King Adaptations
By Gilbert Cruz, Claire Hogan, Karen Hanley and Laura Salaberry
October 29, 2025
Culture
Can You Pair Up These 1980s Novels and Their First Lines?
 
														Welcome to Literary Quotable Quotes, a quiz that tests your recognition of memorable lines. This week’s installment highlights first lines from notable novels of the 1980s. In the five multiple-choice questions below, tap or click on the answer you think is correct. After the last question, you’ll find links to the books if you want to experience the entire work in context.
Culture
Video: Tyler Mitchell Breaks Down Three Photos From His New Book
 
														new video loaded: Tyler Mitchell Breaks Down Three Photos From His New Book
By Erica Ackerberg, Gabby Bulgarelli, Sutton Raphael, Thomas Vollkommer and Laura Bult
October 25, 2025
- 
																	   New York1 week ago New York1 week agoVideo: How Mamdani Has Evolved in the Mayoral Race 
- 
																	   News1 week ago News1 week agoVideo: Federal Agents Detain Man During New York City Raid 
- 
																	   News1 week ago News1 week agoBooks about race and gender to be returned to school libraries on some military bases 
- 
																	   News1 week ago News1 week agoVideo: Driver Crashes Car Into Security Gate Near White House 
- 
																	   News1 week ago News1 week agoVideo: Inside Our Reporter’s Collection of Guantánamo Portraits 
- 
																	   Politics1 week ago Politics1 week agoHunter Biden breaks silence on pardon from dad Joe: ‘I realize how privileged I am’ 
- 
																	   World1 week ago World1 week agoTrump to host NATO chief at White House as Putin meeting collapses 
- 
																	   Politics1 week ago Politics1 week agoJack Smith defends subpoenaing Republican senators’ phone records: ‘Entirely proper’ 
 
									 
									 
									 
									 
											 
											 
											 
											 
											 
											 
											 
											 
											 
											 
											 
											 
											