Denial becomes policy — Tyrus drops chilling truth bomb on Gutfeld! that silences the room and sets social media ablaze. No yelling. No theatrics. Just one razor-sharp line that stopped the laughter cold. As Tyrus calmly dismantled the culture of excuses, a stunned hush fell over the Gutfeld! set — and now, everyone’s asking: was this the moment the conversation finally changed? 

On a fiery segment of Gutfeld! last night, co-host Tyrus didn’t hold back when the panel turned their attention to President Joe Biden’s latest public gaffe—and the conversation quickly turned into a searing takedown.

As Greg Gutfeld set the stage with a sarcastic remark about Biden’s latest moment of confusion during a public appearance, the panel chuckled—until Tyrus leaned in with a stone-cold glare and shut the sympathy talk down fast.

“People keep asking, ‘Don’t you feel bad for him?’” Tyrus said, voice sharp with conviction. “No. I don’t. You know why? Because this is what arrogance looks like when reality hits.”

‘ARROGANCE’: Tyrus explains why he doesn’t feel sorry for Joe Biden

The studio fell quiet as he continued. “This isn’t a man who stumbled into power. He fought tooth and nail for it, surrounded himself with yes-men, ignored the warning signs—and now we’re supposed to feel sorry when the spotlight exposes the truth?”

Gutfeld: Biden got testy over this question - YouTube

Fellow panelist Kat Timpf tried to lighten the mood, joking about presidential memory lapses becoming “America’s new drinking game,” but Tyrus didn’t flinch.

“Let’s be honest,” he snapped. “If this were anyone else—your boss, your pilot, your doctor—you’d want them held accountable. But because it’s Joe, we wrap it in pity? That’s not compassion. That’s denial.”

Gutfeld! : FOXNEWSW : May 8, 2025 12:00am-1:00am PDT : Free Borrow & Streaming : Internet Archive

Greg Gutfeld nodded, calling Tyrus’s take “brutally honest—but fair.”

The conversation then veered into the media’s role in shielding Biden from scrutiny, with Tyrus accusing mainstream outlets of “propping up a narrative at the expense of truth.” He warned that the real victims aren’t politicians, but everyday Americans left to deal with the fallout of failed leadership.

By the end of the segment, the message was clear: Tyrus wasn’t just criticizing Biden—he was calling out a culture of lowered expectations.

“No one’s too powerful to be questioned,” he concluded. “Not even the president. Especially not him.”