Donald Trump just can't help himself. He has to tweet. But then his tweets get him in trouble -- like Richard Nixon-level trouble.

SEE ALSO: Trump is going on a tweet-bender the likes of which we haven't seen in...OK at least days

Trump started Friday off with a tweetstorm that included this threat-like tweet directed at fired FBI director James Comey. That opened a whole new can of worms, specifically whether Trump secretly records things in the White House.

This of course was brought up at Friday's press briefing, which saw the return of Sean Spicer, after he took a few days off from hiding "among" the bushes. Reuters White House correspondent Jeff Mason asked first about the president recording the Comey conversation, but followed up with the logical query, "Are there recording devices in the Oval Office or in the residence?"

Spicer responded: "The president has nothing further to add on that."

Mashable Trend Report Decode what’s viral, what’s next, and what it all means. Sign up for Mashable’s weekly Trend Report newsletter. By clicking Sign Me Up, you confirm you are 16+ and agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Thanks for signing up!

It was the denial heard round the Twitterverse, which was reminded yet again of a certain previous president who got mixed up in secret recordings back in the 1970s. Nixon wasn't the first president to record conversations in the White House, but the tapes were integral to his impeachment in the wake of Watergate.

Others ran with the dark humor and scary similarities to history based on the newly-feasible possibility of secret recordings from Trump's White House.

Even WikiLeaks wants in on the secret "tapes," which gives us a weird look at how the Nixon scandal may have played out had it happened in the age of social media and the internet.

Trump's initial tweet about the Comey "tapes" was just missing the #FlashbackFriday hashtag to give it that Nixonian flavor.


Featured Video For You
South Korea's elections proved gamers' influence is legit