On any other timeline, in any other year, a president feuding with the father of a basketball player would be horrifying. In 2017, however, it’s pretty much par for the course—and as this particular kerfuffle doesn’t threaten to get anyone nuked, we might as well have a laugh about it.

Over the weekend, LaVar Ball—a bombastic figure himself—diminished Donald Trump’s role in getting his son and two other UCLA basketball players back to the U.S. after they were arrested for shoplifting in China. When first asked about the president’s involvement in his son’s release, Ball simply replied, “Who?”

“What was he over there for?” Ball continued. “Don’t tell me nothing. Everybody wants to make it seem like he helped me out.”

Naturally, that didn’t sit too well with the president, who responded on Twitter: “Now that the three basketball players are out of China and saved from years in jail, LaVar Ball, the father of LiAngelo, is unaccepting of what I did for his son and that shoplifting is no big deal. I should have left them in jail!”

“This is the feud we’ve been waiting for,” Seth Meyers joked on Late Night Monday night. “This isn’t Marco Rubio trying to win at Donald Trump’s game. Donald Trump’s game is LaVar Ball’s game. And LaVar Ball knows there’s no better way to troll Trump than pretending to not know who he is.”

“Not only are these tweets childish and embarrassing, they’re also part of a disturbing pattern,” Meyers added. “Trump is clearly a thug and wannabe dictator who lashes out at anyone who isn’t sufficiently obedient.”

Stephen Colbert, who called the shoplifting incident “the most scandalous thing to happen in a mall that did not involve Roy Moore,,” noted that earlier in the week, the president had tweeted, “Do you think the three UCLA Basketball Players will say thank you President Trump? They were headed for 10 years in jail!” The Late Show host couldn’t help but imagine what Thanksgiving at the Trump house is like: “Let’s go around the table and all say what we’re thankful to me for,” Colbert said, in his best Trump voice. “I’ll start.”

Still, the Late Show host had one suggestion for the commander in chief: “Mr. Trump, I know you’re upset. But maybe now is not the time to be implying that someone’s kid should go to jail for what their dad did.”