Fact Check

Did Erika Kirk share post responding to Druski video?

Comedian Druski shared a video on social media that appeared to mock the Turning Point USA CEO.

by Joey Esposito, Published April 1, 2026


Side-by-side image: Erika Kirk, a white woman with blonde hair dressed in black (left), and comedian Druski, a Black man with a thick beard wearing sunglasses and a sideways hat (right).

Image courtesy of Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc. and Rodin Eckenroth/Getty Images for Raising Cane's. accessed via Getty Images and illustrated by Snopes


Claim:
A screenshot authentically showed a post from Turning Point USA CEO Erika Kirk reacting to a video that appeared to mock her by saying, in part, "Y'all keep calling it comedy, but there's nothing funny about bringing this kind of humiliation to my family."
Rating:
Fake

About this rating


In late March 2026, an image spread online (archived, archived) claiming to show an X post from Turning Point USA CEO Erika Kirk reacting to a viral video that appeared to be parodying her. 

The alleged post appeared to show Kirk saying her daughter saw the video and was "confused and hurt by it."

Comedian Druski posted the video in question on March 25, 2026, with the caption, "How Conservative Women in America act." In the video, Druski used prosthetics, makeup and a blonde wig to portray a character resembling Kirk.

While the video did not explicitly name Kirk, the character's styling and a stage setting with pyrotechnics appeared to reference her public appearances.

 
 
 
 
 
View this post on Instagram
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by DRUSKI (@druski)

Kirk's alleged post reacting to the video read:

My own little daughter came to me thinking she had seen me in that video. That's how far this has gone. A grown man turned me into a costume, spread it to millions of people, and now even my child is confused and hurt by it. Y'all keep calling it comedy, but there's nothing funny about bringing this kind of humiliation to my family.

(@GeoRebekah on X)

However, the post was fake.

A search of Kirk's X page for the post's text returned no results. As of this writing, Kirk's latest post on X was shared on March 21, 2026 — before Druski posted his video. 

Furthermore, reverse image searches did not return results for an authentic post from Kirk. Google only showed other users sharing the fake post, while TinEye returned no matches.

Other signs also indicated the alleged post was fake. It did not include a timestamp or engagement metrics, such as likes, comments and reshares, found in an authentic X post.  

Kirk had not commented on the video or the fake post by the time of publication. Snopes reached out to Kirk for comment and will update this article if we receive a response. 

Fake posts attributed to prominent political figures have become a growing source of misinformation. Snopes has previously debunked claims that Elon Musk said on social media that Teslas could not be used to dodge a military draft and that Trump posted he was "proud" of his "ICE boys."


By Joey Esposito

Joey Esposito has written for a variety of entertainment publications. He's into music, video games ... and birds.


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