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January 20, 2017, was a crucial day in history. Dressed in a black suit, broad red tie, and with his trademark mop of yellow hair, Donald Trump put his hand on the Bible and was sworn in as the 45th President of the United States. A less than huge crowd watched the inauguration as rain poured down on them, and Trump uttered his first ever lie as President – about the size of the audience.

Nearly a year later, “after a long, arduous road”, on January 9, the President attained yet another landmark in his career. The Washington Post estimated that he had made more than 2,000 “false or misleading claims” while in office. Or, as talk show host Jimmy Kimmel put it more simply, he had told over 2,000 lies.

To commemorate the milestone Kimmel compiled a mini-documentary titled Pants of Fire: The Road to 2000 Lies. It looks back at Trump’s many prevarications to show how “we got to this remarkable moment in misrepresentation”, and how he became “the greatest liar of all time”.

Trump has been uttering an average of 5.6 lies a day, according to Kimmel’s calculations, which is probably why he’s constantly imploring his audiences to “believe me”. Well he needn’t worry, because according to the documentary, “His place in the fake history books is forever secure, thanks to his total lack of shame, unlimited capacity for bullshit and his pants of fire.”