It's official. Donald Trump is TIME Magazine's 2016 person of the year.

Of course, the left-leaning publication wouldn't just give the President-elect recognition for winning the most improbable election in this country's history without throwing in a shot. Right?

Comedian Jeremy McLellan noticed something peculiar about the cover of TIME.

TIME is known for naming controversial figures as their person of the year, but they've always been respectful in how they design each cover. Well, except for Adolf Hitler. When the Nazi German dictator was recognized as "Man of the Year" in 1938, TIME founder Henry Luce said it was because Hitler, "for better or worse," had most influenced events of that preceding year. However, the magazine recruited a German Catholic artist who fled Hitler's Germany, Baron Rudolph Charles von Ripper, to draw the cover of the authoritarian playing a "hymn of hate" depicted below.

Is the design of this year's cover a subtle shot at the President-elect or is it simply coincidental?

Well, over the course of the campaign, TIME has been harsh on Trump in their coverage of him, either by mocking him or perpetrating fear to the public.

This is a cover of Trump from August 2015 when his surge to the top of the polls began.

Then it continued into early 2016.

Then came the jokes.

And more jokes.

Then Trump won the whole damn election, and TIME realized they had messed up.

So, while Trump is TIME's 2016 person of the year and the president-elect, the mainstream media will do anything and everything to tear him down.

Watch their obvious explanation for selecting Trump as person of the year below: