This just hasn’t been Donald Trump’s week.

First he got roasted to the brink of charring by President Barack Obama and “Saturday Night Live” comedian Seth Meyers at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner Saturday night.

Then, folks east of the Colorado River who tuned in to NBC’s “Celebrity Apprentice” Sunday night didn’t see Trump recite his famous “You’re fired!” closing line. Instead, they watched the president inform the nation that Osama bin Laden had been killed.

Third on the list was the announcement by the Indianapolis Motor Speedway that Trump wouldn’t be driving the pace car at the Indy 500 this month. The Donald said he had to drop out due to “time and business constraints,” but few seemed to buy that excuse. Some wondered if he forgot how to drive after having a chauffeur for so long. Others speculated that he pulled out because he was worried about his hair blowing in the wind. And then there were the 18,000+ fans who joined the “We Don't Want Donald Trump to Drive the Indy 500 Pace Car” Facebook group. They objected, in part, to Trump’s “recent descent into the ‘birther’ movement.” (It was announced Friday that four-time Indy winner AJ Foyt will drive the pace car instead.)

Finally, in a bit of international piling on, a documentary titled “You’ve Been Trumped” had its world premiere at Toronto’s Hot Docs filmfest. The movie, filmed in Scotland by indie director Anthony Baxter, tells the story of a $2 billion Trump golf course development (1,500 houses, a 450-bed hotel, a golf academy and two golf courses) on the coast north of Aberdeen.

The film looks at the mega-development’s short- and long-term impact on local residents, the environment and the region’s economy.

“I haven’t had water for a week,” a resident says, in a thick Scottish brogue, of the impact. Others protesters march with bagpipes and signs that read “Tripping up Trump.” Environmental experts speak of the project’s adverse impact on the ecosystem.

Baxter told POLITICO that the film was going to have a special screening for 800 students in Ontario on Friday.

Yes, folks from different generations and nationalities will all be in on Trump’s terrible, horrible, no good, very bad week.