On Tuesday evening, Pat Sajak, the witty host of “Wheel of Fortune,” issued two tweets that hilariously won Twitter and destroyed the Democratic presidential debate. With one minute left before the debate started, Sajak tweeted, “I’m all goose-bumpy waiting for it to start.”

I’m all goose-bumpy waiting for it to start. — Pat Sajak (@patsajak) October 15, 2019

Three minutes later and two minutes into the debate, Sajak followed with, “I’m done.”

I’m done. — Pat Sajak (@patsajak) October 16, 2019

In late June, Sajak lanced the Democratic presidential debate with this deathless tweet, writing, “This could be worse. It could be a dinner party and I could be there.”

This could be worse. It could be a dinner party and I could be there. — Pat Sajak (@patsajak) June 28, 2019

Sajak has famously tweeted such pointed and brief remarks before. After the horrific Las Vegas massacre in October 2017, when celebrities chimed in with their uninformed opinions, Sajak tweeted, “OK, let me explain this again: We’re celebs. We’re wiser & more empathetic than you. We are famous. Please take our opinions more seriously.” Sajak’s biting wit did not spare the celebrity Left, as The Daily Wire noted at the time:

This is not first time Sajak, a political conservative, has lanced the celebrity bubble of leftism that pervades Hollywood; his resume should have been a warning to leftists that his wit would target them. Sajak is an external director for the conservative publishing house Eagle Publishing, serves on the Board of Trustees at Hillsdale College and has served on the Board of Directors for the Claremont Institute.

Here are some other examples of Sajak pointedly targeting the Left:

As The Daily Wire reported in June, Sajak’s view of the June debate was not unique. Despite the fact that the second night of the Democratic presidential debates outpaced the first — drawing 15.26 million viewers across the three networks, according to The Hollywood Reporter — the debate still slightly trailed the first 2012 Democratic presidential debate, which drew 15.46 million viewers, and was left in the dust by the first GOP presidential debate in 2012, which attracted a whopping 24 million viewers.

The latest Democratic presidential debate fared even worse, as The Hollywood Reporter noted: