Donald Trump is having a harder and harder time these days finding a new program that is not covering the myriad of problems inside his chaotic and thus far ineffective administration - and so he has created his own.

On Sunday afternoon, President Trump posted the first episode of this new program on his Facebook page, which provided viewers with a recap of his 'wins' for the week.

It also gave the commander-in-chief a chance to employ yet another family member, as pregnant daughter-in-law Lara hosted the online episode.

She signed off at the end of the two-minute video by saying: 'Thanks for joining us everybody, and that is the real news.'

Scroll down for video

Lara Trump (pictured) is now hosting a 'real news' video series that uncritically promotes Donald Trump's weekly actions and positive developments for the American economy

Trump shared the video on his personal webpage. In it, Lara cites falling unemployment, job creation and a Dow Jones all-time high as proof that Trump is doing well

The first episode of the what is intended to be an ongoing series offered a limited and non-critical look at a number of topics, all of which cast Trump in a positive light.

Things kicked off with an announcement that Trump had donated his salary to the Department of Education this quarter after previously handing it over to the Parks Department in the first quarter.

'Again, this is a President who is putting America before himself,' said Lara, 33, who is married to Trump's son Eric and carrying his child.

She went on to enthuse about the US having the lowest unemployment rate in 16 years.

However, she neglected to mention that the unemployment rate has been falling continuously every month for the past 79 months.

She also noted that the Dow Jones index had reached historic highs, and said that 800,000 new jobs had been created under Trump's tenure, as well as the announcement of a planned FoxConn factory in Wisconsin.

This was all part of Trump's plan to boost the American economy with more manufacturing jobs, she claimed.

She also talked about Trump's visits to veterans, his awarding of medals to the officers who protected Steve Scalise and other GOP lawmakers in June, and his meeting with ICE and other law enforcement officials regarding the MS-13 gang.

Unsurprisingly, it makes no mention of the chaos that has swamped the White House in recent weeks, including the jettisoning of chief of staff Reince Priebus or the six-day tenure of Anthony Scaramucci as White House communications director.

Lara is the latest member of the Trump family to find a place within the White House, after Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump became advisers to the president.

However, the extent to which they are still able to get the president's ear on matters of state is unclear.

Ivanka in particular has struggled to swing her father away from the religious Republican base represented by Mike Pence on issues of climate change and funding for Planned Parenthood.

She reportedly also only learned about Trump's ban on transgender people in the military through Twitter.

And on Monday afternoon it was announced that she and Jared - along with all other senior aides to the president - must now report to new chief of staff John Kelly, not Trump.