The American political landscape is no stranger to holiday photo gaffes, but this year, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (RFK Jr.) has managed to set a new, painfully awkward standard. His attempt to share a festive, heartwarming glimpse into his Thanksgiving celebration backfired spectacularly after a picture posted to his social media was instantly labeled as laughably staged.

What was meticulously curated to look like a cozy Thanksgiving power dinner instead ignited a wave of ridicule after a glossy photo shared by RFK Jr. was allegedly staged—and the moment was not lost on late-night host Stephen Colbert, who dedicated a scathing segment to the political misfire, proving that even a turkey dinner can’t hide the cracks in a carefully constructed political image.

The Faux Festivity Failure

The image in question showed RFK Jr. sitting at an impossibly pristine table, surrounded by stern-looking family members, all bathed in an unnaturally warm, glossy filter. Critics immediately jumped on several key details: the turkey was too perfect (suspiciously stock-photo worthy), the smiles were too forced, and the lighting suggested a professional portrait studio rather than a family dining room.

The photo was clearly meant to project a powerful, yet warm, image of unity—a “power dinner” where policy was debated between bites of stuffing. Instead, it screamed inauthenticity, leading to thousands of mocking comments asking if the gravy was also photoshopped. The core failure was simple: it sacrificed cozy for glossy, and the public immediately spotted the deceit.

Colbert Skewers the “Power Dinner”

Stephen Colbert seized the opportunity on The Late Show, using the disastrous image as proof that the RFK Jr. campaign is dangerously out of touch with reality.

In a mock segment, Colbert projected the photo, quipping: “Look at this! It looks less like a Thanksgiving dinner and more like the last supper of a mid-level corporate finance team that just got audited. Where’s the chaos? Where’s the uncle who spilled the wine? Where’s the evidence that anyone here actually knows how to use an oven?”

Colbert mercilessly highlighted the “power dinner” aspect, suggesting the filter was used to hide the fact that the entire meal was catered by a company specializing in politically neutral side dishes. “He wanted a cozy dinner, folks, but ended up with a glossy dinner. The only thing they served was the uncomfortable silence of knowing the photographer was charging by the hour.”

The Political Fallout

The incident quickly transitioned from a late-night punchline to a serious political liability. The photo became a symbol of the campaign’s perceived lack of genuineness. In a world where voters crave authenticity, the meticulously staged scene did more damage than any unfiltered mistake ever could. For RFK Jr., the Thanksgiving photo proved that trying too hard to look perfect often yields the opposite result.