If Donald Trump’s increasingly horrifying responses to the tragedy that took place in Charlottesville, Virginia, over the weekend have you wondering exactly how far down rock bottom is, you’re not alone. For the second evening in a row, both Seth Meyers and Stephen Colbert found themselves asking that same question on Tuesday night—thanks to an unhinged press conference in which the president blamed leftists for the violence and defended the rally. According to Meyers, there’s only one way to describe the presser: “clinically insane.”

“You know that list of side effects at the end of a pharmaceutical ad?” Meyers quipped Tuesday night. “[Trump] apparently has all of them. He said, among other things, that there were ‘very fine people’ on both sides of the events of Charlottesville. He asked if people on the left have any guilt that the white supremacists became violent, and then he said this.” Meyers then played Trump questioning the value of taking down statues of Confederate icons like Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson—then wondering whether statues of George Washington and Thomas Jefferson could be next. As the president put it, “You know, you really do have to ask yourself, ‘Where does it stop?’“

“Where does it stop?” Meyers said. “Buddy, we have been asking ourselves that question since January. Normally, when someone is talking that level of crazy, Batman punches through the ceiling and punches him.” All told, the presser left Meyers with just one question: “Congress, isn’t this enough?”

Tuesday’s press conference, which came late in the afternoon, had forced hosts and their writing staffs to, once again, scrap their planned monologues and come up with new material on the fly just before taping their respective shows. Thankfully, at this point, they’re quite used to that challenge.

As far as Colbert was concerned, Trump’s press conference took place “in the seventh circle of Hell.” He seemed particularly amused by Trump’s assertion that he likes “to be correct” before he makes official statements. The comedian put on his best Trump voice as he joked, “I wait for the facts, O.K.? Just ask the millions of illegal voters who refused to look for Obama’s birth certificate during my record-breaking inauguration. O.K.? It’s all on the Obama wiretaps. It’s all there.”

But Colbert saved his best zinger for a specific Trump complaint: “If the press were not fake, and if it was honest, the press would have said what I said was very nice.” After playing the clip, the comedian shot back, “And if you were a better president, you would have said something very nice. But you’re not. Hypotheticals are fun.”