Update: Jan. 31, 7:50 a.m.: Ellen DeGeneres has responded to the White House’s choice to screen Finding Dory on Sunday. On her talk show on Monday, she indicated that she didn’t want to “get political”—but then described the film’s plot in such a way that it sounded like the journey a refugee might take while traveling to the United States.

“Even though Dory gets into America, she gets separated from her family,” DeGeneres said. “But the other animals help Dory. Animals that don’t even need her, animals that don’t even have anything in common with her. They help her even though they’re completely different colors because that’s what you do when you see someone in need: you help them.”

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After President Donald Trump signed an executive order Friday that effectively banned refugees, visa holders, green-card holders, children, doctors, and others from seven Muslim-majority nations from entering the U.S., protests erupted across the nation, with thousands condemning the administration’s apparent fulfillment of a long-promised "Muslim ban." It was a historic weekend that unified citizens across the country. And what, might you ask, was the White House doing as thousands of citizens loudly explored their right to assemble and judges granted emergency stays to people detained in various airports? Simple: it was watching Finding Dory.

On Sunday, the president was scheduled for a three P.M. viewing of the blockbuster Pixar film, which is also the first film to screen in the White House during Trump’s presidency. Staffers and family members settled into the screening, according to The Hill.

Trump himself, according to a tweet from his press secretary, Sean Spicer—a man who has been known to fluff the truth—only stopped by for “60 seconds, welcoming & thanking spouses & children of WH staff then right back to work: up next 7 p.m. call w South Korea.”

Still, the optics alone were enough to anger and amuse observers. Some noted that the film is, ironically enough, about a family trying to re-unite after a series of harrowing events, not unlike the events unfolding after Trump’s instantly criticized order. Many also mocked the screening on social media, noting it as a particularly tone-deaf choice while Trump’s ban causes utter chaos for people frightened for their lives and futures in this country.

Ellen DeGeneres, who voices the role of Dory in the film, probably also isn’t too thrilled with Trump’s choice. On Sunday, she tweeted against Trump’s ban, writing that “America is great because of all the people who came here. Not in spite of them. #NoBan.” She later tweeted that her “grandparents were immigrants. The woman making us pizza right now is Muslim. And I’m grateful for all of them. #NoBan.”