A report from Trump's memecoin dinner.
 

June 25, 2025

 

You are going to see a picture of food that looks pretty mid in the next few seconds. I want to try it more than any other food in the world.

Matt Stieb

TRUMP 2.0

Trump’s Hyped Meme-Coin Dinner Might Have Been a Bust The contest that promised “Dinner With President Trump” didn’t even include a dinner with President Trump.

Photo-Illustration: Intelligencer; Photos: Getty

In the ballroom of the Trump National Golf Club Washington, D.C., on Thursday night, 220 cryptocurrency VIPs were waiting for their dinner with the president. Seated ten to a table, they were treated to the “Trump Organic Field Green Salad” — cucumber, carrot, pickled red onion, and cherry tomato under a honey vinaigrette — followed by pucks of filet mignon and halibut. On the side, they were served a dollop of mashed potatoes and what sure looked like frozen vegetables. The dress code was black tie, though some opted for bitcoin-orange bow ties. One attendee estimates that there were “five to eight” women.

“The food was not important,” attendee Sangrok Oh explains.

The 215-odd men and five-to-eight women were there thanks to a rare opportunity — to purchase face-time with the president. In April, Donald Trump announced a sweepstakes for the top buyers of $TRUMP, a meme coin he launched on his inauguration weekend that has no inherent value or utility. Oh, a crypto-firm founder from South Korea even eked his way into the top 25, earning a private reception before the meal and a White House tour on Friday. “It’s kind of a fundraiser,” Oh said in a separate interview with the New York Times. “And he’ll always be good to his sponsors.”

The main course at the meme-coin dinner. Photo: Morten Christensen

Concerns from protesters outside that crypto millionaires were lobbying the president may have been overstated. Trump landed in the Marine One helicopter around 6:55 p.m., when he had a brief meeting with the top-25 diners. In a back room, Oh says that Trump expressed a “clear intention to support people in the crypto industry.” Then the president came out to address the main crowd, promising more support to the sector that has inflated his personal net worth by hundreds of millions over the past year. “Then he started joking around — ‘What a beautiful place, I wonder who owns it,’” says Vincent Liu, the chief operating officer at the Taiwan-based firm Kronos Research, who was also in attendance. After 15-to-20 minutes — a short window for the long-winded president — Trump was done. As diners tucked into their meals, they heard the helicopter taking off back to the White House. The contest that promised “Dinner With President Trump” didn’t even include a dinner with President Trump.

Some complained to the crypto journalist Coffeezilla that the dinner was disappointing and the speech was “wack.” But Liu thought it was “very much worth it” to be in the room with the pro-crypto president and network with other industry leaders. Oh said that “meeting with other CEOs” was the most important part. Among those in the crowd were Justin Sun, the billionaire who has benefited greatly from Trump’s lax crypto enforcement — and has invested almost $100 million in Trump’s assorted crypto properties. Lamar Odom, the former Los Angeles Laker, was there as a crypto convert pumping his own coin, $Odom.

Protesters outside concerned with Trump benefiting off the presidency had a point: The meme coin alone has earned Trump’s businesses hundreds of millions of dollars in fees alone. And the dinner was certainly lucrative. A crypto intelligence firm told Reuters that the top 220 investors in total spent $148 million, which raked in more fees for Trump and provided a temporary boost to the coin’s value. But there were some who got in there for a steal.

Lamar Odom and Morten Christensen Photo: Morten Christensen

Morten Christensen is a 39-year-old Dutch national living in Mexico City who runs a company that connects users to free cryptocurrency giveaways. As the contest wore on, Christensen and his friends used a basic risk-management strategy to buy enough $TRUMP to get in the room without investing heavily in the coin.

Their strategy is called a delta-neutral play. Christensen says he bought $50,000 worth of the coin while hedging it for the same amount on a separate exchange in order to reap the rewards without being exposed to any of the risk. “We do this every day on much deeper levels,” he says. He adds that he and five friends managed to get into the dinner spending around $1,200 each in fees.

After meeting Odom and Sun, Christensen began talking to other investors at the dinner. Of roughly 40 people he chatted with, he says, “Most people I spoke to had hedge positions” — suggesting all might not be what it seems on the $TRUMP leaderboard.

After mingling, Christensen did not head to the after-party. “My friends did, and they weren’t very impressed,” he says. He had gotten what he came for. “When this opportunity pops up and you figure out a way to do it risk free? Yeah, I’ll take that opportunity for sure,” he says. But the bonus he hoped for did not work out. “Me and my friends were hoping that he would slip something that we could trade on,” he says. One of his friends even livestreamed to a 20-person group on Discord in case there was market-moving news. “So we were all having our wallets open and our exchanges open to be able to make a trade if he said something, but he didn’t say anything.”

 

Subscribe now to get unlimited access to everything New York, including subscriber-only newsletters, exclusive perks, the New York app, and more.

SUBSCRIBE NOW
 

THE INTERNET

Oh, No Stay away from the #skinni content.

Some former members I spoke with said the women in their chat would regularly discuss experiencing dizziness, fatigue, and brain fog. Emma told me that people often talked about their periods becoming irregular or experiencing hair loss, two common side effects of disordered eating. “None of the members in the group said, ‘Maybe you should chill out,’” she said. “They just recommended hair vitamins to each other.” Another woman, who joined the Skinni Société to lose weight after giving birth, told me she saw some members eating less than 1,000 calories a day (going against Schmidt’s guidelines to not post meal plans less than 1,200 calories). I also saw women exchanging tips: One said she puts on mouth tape after dinner to deter nighttime snacking, while another said she used prunes as laxatives whenever she feels “heavy.”

E.J. Dickson went inside influencer Liv Schmidt’s subscriber-only “Skinni Société” chat, and what she found was pretty horrifying. 

 

ADVERTISER CONTENT

 
Learn more about OpenWeb
 

Click Your Way Out

Photo-Illustration: The Strategist; Photos: Retailers

  • Our megaguide to Memorial Day sales.
  • Mission Impossible — The Final Reckoning, Friendship, and other things to watch this weekend. (Related: Ranking all the Mission Impossible movies.)
  • The best apartments on the market in New York right now.
  • How to spend a long weekend in Detroit.
  • Why the college-admissions process has been even more chaotic this year.
  • Horoscopes.
  • Cinematrix.
  • Crossword.

We will see you on Tuesday.

 

ADVERTISER CONTENT

 
Learn more about OpenWeb

Sign up for the Strategist Sales Alert

Daily email alerts to keep track of the best sales, as chosen by our deals-obsessed editors.

SIGN UP
New York

follow us on instagram •  twitter  • facebook

unsubscribe  |  privacy notice  |  preferences


This email was sent to pakafka@gmail.com. Was this email forwarded to you? Sign up now to get this newsletter in your inbox.

View this email in your browser. 


Vox Media, LLC
1701 Rhode Island Ave NW, Washington, DC 20036
Copyright © 2025, All rights reserved

https://link.nymag.com/oc/640f640416f22cc291043cebntiap.15g1/e8f4911e