It doesn't take much to provoke President Donald Trump into blocking a follower on Twitter - anything from an insult to an unflattering gif to a mild "covfefe" joke seems enough to do the trick.
So it perhaps shouldn't come as a surprise that best-selling author Stephen King was abruptly added to the #BlockedByTrump list Tuesday. The horror fiction maestro has been one of Trump's most consistent and creative Twitter critics since well before the November election: "A Trump presidency scares me more than anything else," he told Ron Charles, editor of The Washington Post's Book World, during a Facebook Live interview in September. "I'm terrified that he'll become president."
Trump, of course, did exactly that - and King continued to offer outspoken condemnation (and sometimes, outright mockery) in response to Trump's Twitter missives. That is, until Tuesday, when King announced that he had apparently been blocked from viewing the president's tweets:
"Trump has blocked me from reading his tweets. I may have to kill myself."
The tipping point appeared to be a couple of pointed barbs aimed at at the president's cabinet and his daughter, Ivanka Trump.