Your daily adult tube feed all in one place!
Former San Francisco mayor Willie Brown has said Donald Trump's claim they shared a near-death experience 'never happened'.
Republican presidential nominee Trump told reporters at a Mar-A-Lago news conference on Thursday night that he and Brown were in a helicopter that was forced to make an emergency landing and both men thought this 'may be the end'.
However, according to Brown, he and Trump have never rode in the same helicopter and he was instead doing his best 'creative fiction'.
'I've never done business with Donald Trump, let's start with that,' Brown - who dated Kamala Harris in 1994 and 1995 - told KRON4.
'And secondly, I don't think I'd want to ride on the same helicopter with him. There's too many people that have an agenda with reference to him, including the people who service helicopters!'
Former San Francisco mayor Willie Brown, pictured, claimed he and Donald Trump never had a near-death experience together
Trump told reporters at a Mar-A-Lago news conference that he and Brown were in a helicopter that was forced to make an emergency landing
'He was doing what Donald does best, his creative fiction. He's creative, real creative. That's so far-fetched, it's unbelievable.'
He went on to say that the world 'would have known about it' if it was to have happened.
Discussing Kamala Harris, Brown also added: 'I was a part of every campaign that she's ever been involved in, supported her religiously and will still do so, and I am just looking forward for the next 89 days.'
According to the New York Times, it wasn't Willie Brown who was in the helicopter at the time, but rather Gov. Jerry Brown, the former governor of California.
The publication also said there was no emergency landing, and that the passengers were never in any danger.
'There was no emergency landing and no discussion of Kamala Harris,' Jerry Brown's spokesperson told the NYT.
Meanwhile, California's governor - Gavin Newsom, who was on the helicopter with Trump and Jerry Brown, said after the press conference: 'I call complete B.S.'
Trump's account was given in response to a reporter who asked about Harris's relationship with Willie Brown.
Harris was a prosecutor in Alameda County at the time, while Brown was the speaker of the California State Assembly.
Trump told the reporter he knows Willie Brown 'very well' and said: 'In fact, I went down in a helicopter with him' before telling a story of how they came close to death in the chopper. 'We thought maybe this was the end,' Trump told reporters.
'We were in a helicopter, going to a certain location together, and there was an emergency landing. This was not a pleasant landing.
'And Willie was — he was a little concerned,' Mr. Trump continued. 'So I know him, but I know him pretty well. I mean, I haven't seen him in years. But he told me terrible things about her. But this is what you're telling me, anyway, I guess.
'But he had a big part in what happened with Kamala. But he - I don't know, maybe he's changed his tune. But he was not a fan of hers very much, at that point.'
In response, Gavin Newsom said: 'I was on a helicopter with Jerry Brown and Trump, and it didn't go down.'
Yesterday, Trump revisited his attacks on Harris' racial identity, saying in a press conference that the burden was on her to explain it.
Trump got asked in his hour long presser Thursday how he could have said the Demoratic presidential nominee 'happened to turn Black' – a comment he made during a contentious interview at a Black journalists association event.
A reporter noted that Harris' father is Jamaican-American and that she went to a historically black college – Howard University – wondering why it was accurate to say she recently decided to be Black. (Her mother is an immigrant to the U.S. from India.)
Vice President Kamala Harris speaks during her and Governor Tim Walz presidential campaign rally at the High Country in Wisconsin
'Well, well, you'll have to ask her that question because she's the one that said it. I didn't say it,' Trump began. 'So you will have to ask her. And I very much appreciate that question. But you'll have to ask her.'
Then he continued to press the issue, while mentioning his own $6,000 in campaign donations he personally made to her when she was California's attorney general.
'But I've known her for a long time. I actually contributed to her campaign a long time ago, because I was a developer.
'I contributed to lots of campaigns of Democrats, Republicans and some were liberal and some were conservative,' Trump said, before doubling down on his criticism of his opponent.