
Comedian Kathy Griffin and adult-film actress Stormy Daniels posed together in a photo this week raising a middle finger to President TrumpDonald John TrumpMcCabe says he was fired because he 'opened a case against' Trump McCabe: Trump said 'I don't care, I believe Putin' when confronted with US intel on North Korea McCabe: Trump talked to me about his election victory during 'bizarre' job interview MORE.
“@StormyDaniels it was an honor to have you at my Boston show tonight,” Griffin tweeted after her show Thursday night. “I support you 100%! #F---Trump.”
. @StormyDaniels it was an honor to have you at my Boston show tonight. I support you 100%! #FuckTrump pic.twitter.com/MSPQBy18yh
— Kathy Griffin (@kathygriffin) June 22, 2018
Daniels later shared the tweet, thanking the comedian.
Thank you so much! #teamstormy had a great time! https://t.co/71AAqyRI0d
— Stormy Daniels (@StormyDaniels) June 22, 2018
Griffin also shared a follow-up tweet featuring a photo of her hugging Daniels, who is suing Trump and his longtime personal attorney Michael Cohen.
The comedian captioned the photo: "Love this woman.”
Love this woman pic.twitter.com/kEk3xfTSYK
— Kathy Griffin (@kathygriffin) June 22, 2018
The photo comes just days after Griffin went after first lady Melania TrumpMelania TrumpThe Hill's 12:30 Report — Presented by Kidney Care Partners — Trump escalates border fight with emergency declaration Trump dismisses Ann Coulter after criticism: 'I hardly know her' The Hill's Morning Report — Presented by the American Academy of HIV Medicine — Trump, Congress prepare for new border wall fight MORE over her statement saying she “hates” seeing immigrant families separated at the border.
“F--- you, Melanie,” Griffin tweeted. “You know damn well your husband can end this immediately...you feckless complicit piece of s---.”
Griffin first came under fire with the Trump administration last May after she posted a controversial photo of herself posing with a fake decapitated head resembling the president.
Though the comedian initially apologized for the photo shoot, Griffin – who said the backlash had severely hurt her livelihood – said in August that she was no "longer sorry." She added the focus should be on Trump’s actions instead.