At least a couple of names have leaked. Boeing, apparently scared out of their wits by Trump’s earlier tweets to do in a couple of their planes (or encouraged by his impossi-tweet idea of replacing the latest fighter with the 30-year-old F-18) has kicked in a million. Chevron is also at the top of the Trump contributions board, because … because. Some companies who had openly snubbed Trump’s Republican National Convention over the summer, including JP Morgan and Bank of America, are anxious to get back on the “good” side of his ledger by tossing cash at him.

But for now, most of the money behind the inauguration is invisible. However, we might be able to tell where all that money is going.

x Thank you @realDonaldTrump for already creating jobs! My friend is being paid to be a seat filler at your Inauguration! #TuesdayMotivation — Lesley Abravanel (@lesleyabravanel) January 10, 2017

More than 1.9 million people attended President Obama’s inauguration in 2009. That’s the all-time record.

Just a reminder to Donald Trump: the Screen Actors Guild says non-union extras get $8 an hour. If you can hold it to under two hours, you could spend your donations on a sweet five million people who would act like they adore you! They would have to! Though extras do get a bump in pay for working in wet or difficult conditions. Hmm. It could be close.

Actually, it doesn’t matter. Trump can pocket the $90 million, stiff Toby Keith, and claim there were 8 million people there.

Or he can wait a day, and just photoshop in people from the Women’s March on Washington into his events. That’s looking to be quite a crowd.