Donald Trump has already drawn a ton of comparisons to Joffrey from "Game of Thrones," but according to Trevor Noah he's got a lot more in common with Westeros' neighbors to the North.
"If this was 'Game of Thrones,' Donald Trump would be the White Walkers," Noah told CNN. "Everyone is going to be dealing with it, but it's not the story of the White Walkers."
"We want to know what Daenerys is going through, we want to know what's happening with the Lannisters. We want to know what's going on with the Starks," he said. "That's the story, and everyone is going to deal with this force that is coming for them."
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View StoryNoah went on to call it a "mistake" to cover any developing news out of D.C. as "a Trump story."
"I think of it as the American story, and Donald Trump is one of the characters in the American story," he continued, calling the President a "force in the story."
"We don't know if he's the villain or the hero," he added.
"It's James Comey's story. It's the Department of Justice story, with Jeff Sessions. It's the story of America's courts -- the Supreme Court," Noah continued. "It's the story of an administration. It's the story of the Republicans, who they are and who they will become. It's the story of the Democrats, the next journey they embark on."
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View Story"Thrones" author George R.R. Martin recently weighed in on Donald Trump, comparing him to Cersei's late son.
"I think Joffrey is now the king in America," Martin said. "And he's grown up just as petulant and irrational as he was when he was 13 in the books."
Kit Harington recently chimed in on Trump as well, in a profile with GQ.
"I believe in experts… Mr. Donald Trump — I wouldn't call him 'President,' I'll call him 'Mister.' I think this man at the head of your country is a con artist," he said.
"Thrones can be used as a metaphor way too much, but if there's one truth, I think, it's that people who really desire power are the people who shouldn't have it."