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Dana White reveals “Great” moments at the Trump, Bill Maher meeting

While HBO host Bill Maher and President Donald Trump have been in a historical contradiction, it seems that some old hatred has been broken in the attitude of ultimate battle champion CEO Dana White in a Saturday interview, a “good” visit to the White House.

Maher visited Trump at a March 31 meeting, facilitated by musician Kid Rock, and White also attended. Kid Rock said Trump took the group to a private residence where they saw Gettysburg speaking in Lincoln’s bedroom and talked about their common ground, such as “end wokense” and “protecting the border.”

White said the “coolest thing” about the party was “the two people who didn’t like each other for a long time—two guys who had a lot of opposition—and got together and sat down and chat.”

White said on “My Views with Lara Trump” on Saturday: “There are a lot of really good and smart conversations between him and the president. Kid Locke and I just sat there and let the two spend time together. It was amazing.

Bill Maher calls Trump “one of the most effective politicians” because of his authenticity

White tells Maher’s “lively” move, bringing a long list of names Trump uses to characterize late-night hosts. Maher later said on Friday’s “Real Time” that Trump signed a printout with “Humor”.

“It’s funny. Thank God, he has two people because we both signed it and I framed it and hung it in my office.”

White said Maher sent a lighthearted, “funny” look at Trump’s controversial meeting with Ukrainian President Volodomyr Zelenskyy, jokingly suggesting that White, who was not in a suit, got the costume from the “Zelenskyy Collection.”

Maher has raised his views on the visit since the meeting and said Trump is more intimate and humorous than he expected.

“No one walked into the meeting or went out with Donald Trump, didn’t like him,” White added, reflecting on their friendship that had flourished for twenty years.

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“That’s what needs to happen. People who have objections, not everyone hate each other, get together. Talk. Disagree. Disagree.”

“There has never been a situation like this that makes you agree with everything anyone says. Your friends, your family, are definitely not the president of the United States. That doesn’t mean you have to hate each other.”

Taylor Penley, Joseph A. Wulfsohn and Alexander Hall of Fox News Digital contributed to the report.

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