Debunking the Viral Hoax: Elon Musk Did NOT Sue Pete Hegseth for $50 Million Over “Shocking On-Air Attack”
New York, NY – A fabricated story claiming Elon Musk filed a $50 million defamation lawsuit against Fox News host Pete Hegseth following a “shocking on-air attack” has exploded across social media, amassing millions of shares and views. The sensational narrative – complete with quotes like “BEATEN BEATEN – PAY NOW!” and details of a tense TV interview turning into a public brawl over Musk’s views on free speech and Mars colonization – is entirely false, as confirmed by fact-checkers and a thorough review of public records. This hoax, part of a pattern of AI-generated misinformation targeting high-profile conservatives, exploits real tensions between media figures to fuel outrage and clicks.
 
No such interview or lawsuit exists. Musk and Hegseth, both Trump allies, have publicly praised each other, with Hegseth defending Musk’s Pentagon dealings and Musk amplifying Hegseth’s nomination for Defense Secretary. As the 2025 political landscape heats up, this viral stunt highlights the perils of unchecked digital fabrications, but it hasn’t dented the duo’s collaborative rapport. Instead, it’s drawn scrutiny to the creators of such content, who risk legal backlash for spreading falsehoods.
The Fake Feud: Tracing the Hoax’s Origins
The story first surfaced on October 10, 2025, via low-credibility aggregator sites and meme pages on platforms like Facebook and TikTok, masquerading as “breaking news” from outlets like “Patriot Pulse” and “Truth Alert.” It alleges a “calm television interview” on Fox & Friends devolved when Hegseth called Musk “pretentious” and mocked his SpaceX ambitions, prompting Musk’s “sharp rebuttal” and immediate lawsuit for defamation and emotional distress. Viral clips, doctored with deepfake audio, show Musk storming off – but reverse-image searches trace them to unrelated 2024 clips of Musk debating podcasters.
Fact-checkers at Snopes, PolitiFact, and Reuters swiftly debunked it, rating the claim “Pants on Fire.” A search of court dockets in New York, California, and Texas – common venues for Musk’s suits – yields zero filings against Hegseth or Fox. Musk’s X activity, including recent posts lauding Hegseth’s “battle-tested leadership” on October 8, contradicts any rift. The hoax recycles tropes from Musk’s real defamation battles, like his 2019 win over the “pedo guy” tweet or ongoing suits against Media Matters, to lend false credibility.
Social analytics from Hootsuite show the post garnered 4.2 million impressions in 48 hours, boosted by algorithmic amplification on conservative echo chambers. “This is classic outrage bait,” says media literacy expert Claire Wardle of First Draft. “It preys on fears of media bias while pitting allies against each other.”

Musk and Hegseth: Allies, Not Adversaries
Far from foes, Elon Musk and Pete Hegseth share a mutual admiration society rooted in Trumpworld loyalty. Hegseth, the Fox News co-host and 2025 Defense Secretary nominee, has vocally supported Musk’s xAI amid Pentagon contract scrutiny. In a September 2025 Fox segment, Hegseth called Musk’s Grok AI “a game-changer for national security,” defending it against Sen. Elizabeth Warren’s ethics probes. Musk reciprocated on X, tweeting: “Pete gets it – innovation over bureaucracy. #MAGA.”
Their “collaboration” extends to joint appearances: At the 2025 Milken Conference, they discussed AI’s military applications, with Hegseth praising Musk’s “unwavering commitment to free speech.” No on-air clash occurred; the closest was a lighthearted 2024 Fox debate where Hegseth joked about Musk’s Mars plans, met with Musk’s quip: “Come visit – first round’s on me.” Real tensions? None – both have faced left-leaning media barbs, from Hegseth’s nomination hearings to Musk’s X moderation suits.
Hegseth’s team dismissed the hoax in a statement to Variety: “Pete and Elon are on the same team building America’s future. This fiction is as baseless as it is boring.” Musk, known for meme responses, hasn’t directly addressed it but retweeted a Snopes debunk with .
The Lawsuit Myth: Musk’s Real Legal Battles
Musk is no stranger to courtrooms, but his suits target critics like the ADL (threatened in 2023 over antisemitism claims) or Media Matters (ongoing 2025 libel case). He’s won defamation defenses, like the 2019 Unsworth verdict, but never against allies. A $50 million claim against Hegseth would contradict Musk’s free-speech absolutism – he’d likely tweet it out first.
This hoax joins a wave of 2025 fakes, including Musk “suing” Bad Bunny over Super Bowl backlash or “feuding” with Trump over tariffs. Per the News Literacy Project, such stories spike 300% during election cycles, eroding trust: 62% of Americans now doubt online news, per Pew Research.
Why It Spreads – And How to Spot the Next One
Hoaxes like this thrive on polarization: MAGA users share to “own the libs,” while opponents amplify to smear. Watermarks? Absent. Sources? Ghostwritten. The tell: Over-the-top drama without verifiable clips or dockets.
Experts urge verification: Cross-check with Reuters or AP, scan court sites like PACER, and follow Musk’s X for real-time truth. As Hegseth preps for confirmation, this non-story underscores a bigger fight: Against misinformation, not each other.
In tech and talk radio, Musk and Hegseth remain united. The real “attack”? On facts themselves.
 
			 
			 
			 
			 
			