UltimateBMWfan wrote:Donald Trump.
I'm going to expand on this comment by adding the definition of "trumpery" to the conversation. This is real. Life imitates art, imitates life!
Definition of "trumpery" at Oxford Dictionaries Onlinetrumpery
See definition in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary
Syllabification: trump·er·y
Pronunciation: /ˈtrəmp(ə)rē/
archaic
Definition of trumpery in English:
noun (plural trumperies)
1Attractive articles of little value or use.
Example sentences
All along the extent of the corridor, in little alcoves, there are stalls of shops, kept principally by women, who, as you approach, are seen through the dusk offering for sale… multifarious trumpery.
The 2000 or so mercers included great merchants engaged in international trade and small traders selling trumpery objects from their shops.
1.1Practices or beliefs that are superficially or visually appealing but have little real value or worth.
Example sentences
An assertion of absolute moral superiority in the form of black-shirted nuclear families - spiritual trumpery via breeding.
In fact, it's even more important to bring a critical eye to bear on issues of such import, if only to avoid the kind of moral trumpery that goes on in these sorts of letters.
You mean to tell me I gave the book up for nothing but trumpery?
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adjective
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1Showy but worthless: trumpery jewelry
More example sentences
Descriptions of the artist in his painting room ‘up to his ears in the trumpery he had been collecting for many a year’ include these panels, which he hoped ‘to use… in some way that may add to their value.’
A gipsy boy, with whom I was on friendly terms, used to travel about this part of the country selling trumpery brooches and ornaments.
1.1Delusive or shallow: that trumpery hope which lets us dupe ourselves
More example sentences
We need not neglect all our work for a trumpery incident of this nature; though I am quite aware that little things please little minds.
Deploring the damage done by gulfs between creeds and cultures, he opens up a crevasse between the seemingly serious intent of his novel and the trumpery nature of its techniques.
Origin
Late Middle English (denoting trickery): from Old French tromperie, from tromper 'deceive'.