Facebook filled up late Friday and early Saturday with videos of a hacked street sign along eastbound Lemmon Avenue near northbound North Central Expressway with less than kind words for President Donald Trump — or, to be more specific, "Turmp" — and his supporters.

Most of the sign's content doesn't pass muster in a family newspaper — or a fourth-grade writing assignment.

It begins, "I've got one thing to say ..." The next screen then flashes four words, three of which are expletives; one of which says, "TURMP." Two screens later, it says, "[Expletive] y'all for voting for that [expletive]."

Street signs were hacked with regularity in 2016, with Dallas' displays garnering attention in The Washington Post after anti-Trump ("Donald Trump is a shape shifting lizard") and pro-Bernie Sanders messages began making the rounds.

Another sign, in Uptown, said that Harambe, the gorilla shot to death at the Cincinnati Zoo, "deserved it." And an obscene anti-Trump sign popped up in Fair Park in November 2016.

When last year's hacks took place, Texas Department of Transportation officials said the signs belonged to third-party contractors who were investigating the hacks — which, incidentally, aren't all that difficult to pull off because the signs aren't encrypted. TxDOT never said whether they found the culprits, whom officials had hoped to charge with third-degree felonies.

At noon Saturday, TxDOT spokesman Tony Hartzel went over to take a look at the sign to see to whom it had been assigned — the state, the city or another party.

"As of now, we don't have any information that it's ours," he said. "But we have taken steps with our contractors to make sure they understand the importance of additional measures to make sure the signs don't get hacked."

By day's end, Hartzel said TxDOT's area office had informed him that "the board is not associated with any of our projects."