{"ok":true,"report":{"slug":"GoPw4v4G","publishedAt":1781494356009,"post":{"text":"Remember when taxpayers paid millions to rock stars for private White House concerts for Obama and his guests?","uri":"https://www.threads.com/@dugganflanakin/post/DZlyUSmFWAy","authorHandle":"dugganflanakin"},"verdict":{"verdict":"False","confidence":95,"summary":"The post falsely claims that taxpayers paid millions to rock stars for private White House concerts during the Obama administration. While President Obama did host numerous musical events featuring famous artists, performers typically volunteered their time or were paid nominal union scale fees (often around $1,000 or less), not millions. For at least one notable private concert (featuring Prince and Stevie Wonder in 2015), the White House confirmed the Obamas paid for the event with their own personal funds.","claims":[{"claim":"Taxpayers paid millions to rock stars for private White House concerts during the Obama administration.","assessment":"There is no evidence that taxpayers paid millions to performers. Musicians at White House events typically perform for free as an honor or receive nominal union scale payments (often around $1,000 or less), similar to performers at presidential inaugurations or the Super Bowl halftime show. The 'millions' figure appears to be a fabrication or a conflation with overall event production/security costs, which are taxpayer-funded but do not go to the artists.","status":"False"},{"claim":"Obama hosted private White House concerts for himself and his guests.","assessment":"President Obama hosted numerous musical events at the White House, including the PBS-broadcast 'In Performance at the White House' series, state dinners, and private parties. For example, in 2015, the Obamas hosted a private party featuring Prince and Stevie Wonder. The White House press secretary confirmed the Obamas personally paid for this private event.","status":"Confirmed"}],"caveats":"While taxpayers do fund the operational, security, and production costs of official White House events (which can be substantial), these funds do not go to the performers as personal payment. The post specifically claims taxpayers paid the rock stars 'millions,' which is unsupported and contradicted by standard White House practices and specific reporting on these events.","sources":[{"title":"President Obama Paid For Private White House Party With Prince, Stevie Wonder","url":"https://abcnews.com/Politics/prince-stevie-performed-private-white-house-party-weekend/story?id=31773296"},{"title":"The Obamas paid for Saturday's private Prince concert themselves","url":"https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/reliable-source/wp/2015/06/14/princes-performance-at-the-white-house-still-under-the-radar"},{"title":"Barack Obama's Rock & Roll White House","url":"https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-lists/barack-obamas-rock-roll-white-house-21231"},{"title":"In Performance at the White House - Wikipedia","url":"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/In_Performance_at_the_White_House"}]},"communityNote":"False. Taxpayers did not pay millions to musicians for White House concerts under Obama. Artists typically performed for free or received nominal union scale fees around $1,000. The Obamas also used personal funds to pay for at least one private event.","sourceUrl":"https://abcnews.com/Politics/prince-stevie-performed-private-white-house-party-weekend/story?id=31773296"}}