In 1998 a retail computer company called Cozone ran ads on TV featuring famous people doing unfamiliar things. Dr. Joyce Brothers went out turkey hunting; a football player tried to crochet, and Donald Trump tried his hand at making pottery.
As is to be expected, he ended up making a mess by throwing wet clay everywhere, broke the potters’ wheel, wouldn’t follow the teacher’s instructions, dropped and smashed a pot because it burned his hands, offered an exorbitant amount of money to buy a competent potter’s work (and presumably pass it off as his own), and then leers down the cleavage of a disgusted young woman as they washed up at a sink. The point of the ad was, don’t ask someone who has no experience with a task to do that task.
This ad could be repurposed for today. The new ad could say, “Instead of pots and clay, he’s broken the government, broken alliances, broken the economy. Instead of buying a fellow student’s work, he’s paid off a porn star and extorted favors to buy political advantage. Instead of leering at one young woman, he has been credibly charged with sexual assault. This is who he’s been all along, and nobody paid attention until it was too late.”