Kenny Loggins is criticizing President Donald Trump for using his song “Danger Zone” to target “No Kings” protesters in a bizarre AI video.

“This is an unauthorized use of my performance of ‘Danger Zone’. No one asked me for permission, which I would have denied, and I request that my recording in this video be removed immediately,” Loggins told Variety in a statement Monday.

Noting that “I can’t imagine why anyone would want their music used or associated with something created for the sole purpose of dividing us,” Loggins continued: “Too many people are trying to tear us apart and we need to find new ways to bring us together.”

Over the weekend, Trump aware An AI-generated video of himself throwing what appears to be excrement on protesters at the “No Kings” rallies, which took place across the country on Saturday to protest the Trump administration.

In the AI-generated clip, Trump wearing a crown and piloting a fighter jet labeled “King Trump” drops a brown substance onto the crowd to the tune of Loggins’ song.

“We are all Americans and we are all patriots,” Loggins continued in his statement. “There is no ‘us and them’; that is not who we are, nor what we should be. It is all of us. We are in this together, and I am hopeful that we can embrace music as a way to celebrate and unite each and every one of us.”

Kenny Loggins and a screenshot of President Trump's AI-generated video.
Kenny Loggins and a screenshot of President Trump’s AI-generated video.

fake images

When asked for comment by Variety, a White House representative responded with a “Top Gun” meme that reads, “I feel the need for speed.” Loggins’ “Danger Zone” is widely known as the theme song to 1986’s “Top Gun,” starring Tom Cruise and Val Kilmer.

The White House did not immediately respond to News themezone’s request for comment.

While Loggins criticized Trump for using his famous song to attack his opponents in the AI ​​video, House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) praised the president and claimed that protesters were trying to “incite violence.”

“The president uses social media to make his point. You can argue that he is probably the most effective person who has ever used social media to do that,” Johnson said at a news conference Monday.

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He added: “He’s using satire to make a point. He’s not calling for the assassination of his political opponents, and that’s what these people are doing.”

On Saturday there were more than 2,700 No Kings pro-democracy demonstrations.

The protests were sparked by continued frustrations over Trump’s policies, including perceived threats to democracy, the government’s violent immigration raids and deployment of National Guard troops in Democratic cities, and cuts to access to health care, among other concerns.