Saturday night delivered two simultaneous news stories that collided on social media in a way that left millions confused, angry, and firing off posts before checking the facts.
A suspected gunman breached a security checkpoint at the Washington Hilton Hotel in Washington, D.C., where the annual White House Correspondents’ Dinner was underway.
Cole Tomas Allen, 31, pushed past security armed with two firearms and multiple knives, according to authorities.
President Donald Trump, First Lady Melania Trump, and senior administration officials were evacuated from the ballroom swiftly after shots rang out.
Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche stated publicly that the evidence pointed to Allen specifically targeting members of the Trump administration.
One law enforcement agent sustained a gunshot wound during the incident, though the injury was not life-threatening. No other injuries were reported.
Hundreds of miles away, at State Farm Arena in Atlanta, a completely unrelated drama was playing out on the hardwood.
The New York Knicks erased a 2-1 series deficit against the Atlanta Hawks with a dominant 114-98 Game 4 playoff victory, squaring their first-round Eastern Conference series at two games apiece.
Actor Ben Stiller, one of the Knicks’ most recognizable celebrity supporters, had spent the entire evening posting reactions to the game in real time on X.
The moment the final buzzer sounded, Stiller posted three words: “Got it done.”
That post, arriving approximately 20 minutes after the scene at the Washington Hilton erupted, set off a chain reaction across social media that Stiller never appeared to anticipate.
Congresswoman Nancy Mace fired back at Stiller directly on X, posting: “Got what done?”
X’s Community Notes feature moved quickly, attaching a correction to Mace’s post that read: “He was rooting on the Knicks to win their game against the Atlanta Hawks. (They did, by the way.)”
Community Notes applied the same correction to a post by Richard Grenell, who had also responded to Stiller’s message in a manner suggesting it referenced the shooting.
Stiller has previously and publicly criticized President Trump, a fact that fueled assumptions among many users that his post carried political intent.
However, Stiller’s Knicks posts throughout the evening provided clear, timestamped context that the message was basketball-related and nothing more.
Stiller did not address the backlash directly. He posted a salute emoji Sunday morning and continued engaging with Knicks content without commenting on the political storm his three words had triggered.
Stiller was spotted on Celebrity Row at Madison Square Garden earlier in the series during Game 2, a 107-106 Knicks loss to the Hawks.
With the series locked at 2-2, Game 5 moves back to Madison Square Garden in New York on Tuesday night.
Game 6 is scheduled in Atlanta, with a decisive Game 7 returning to New York, if the series requires it.
