Protests, political turmoil, pandemic - the inside story of the extraordinary Trump presidency. Friends and foes tell of his rise from TV star to leader of the free world.
The Trump Show is aptly named because no matter how horrifying, grotesque and toe-curlingly petulant Trump's presidential moments have frequently been, you can't say it hasn't been entertaining.
It was a light treatment, superficial and gossipy in an entertaining way. So much has happened in the past four years that the film barely scratched the surface.
The first of the three-part The Trump Show (BBC Two) is thoroughly entertaining, blending cringingly embarrassing clips and tweets from the first 18 months of the Trump administration.
You just sat there, as usual, and drank in the wild details, such as the time they tried to explain US foreign policy to Trump at the Pentagon and he had a "full systems meltdown".