Thursday’s episode of The View got off to an unexpectedly entertaining start before the first topic was even introduced. Whoopi Goldberg, barely through her opening welcome to the studio audience, was stopped in her tracks by a face in the crowd that gave her genuine pause.
The man, seated among the live audience, bore a striking resemblance to former President Barack Obama. Goldberg spotted him almost immediately and could not move past it without saying something. She turned to her cohosts and drew their attention to the man, visibly caught off guard by the resemblance and clearly delighted by the coincidence.
Whoopi Goldberg brings the whole studio into the moment
The exchange that followed was spontaneous and warm. Goldberg addressed the man directly from the stage, explaining that catching a glimpse of him from the corner of her eye had genuinely made her wonder, just for a split second, whether the former president had made an unannounced appearance on the show. The audience responded with applause, and the man at the center of the unexpected attention smiled and looked down as the room reacted around him.
Cohost Sunny Hostin immediately saw the resemblance once Goldberg pointed it out, and the energy in the studio shifted into something lighthearted and unscripted. Joy Behar added a quick joke referencing Obama’s well-known impromptu performance of a classic Al Green song during his presidency, a moment that has followed the former president into pop culture history.
Goldberg made sure to acknowledge the man directly and explain herself before the show moved on, turning what could have been a passing moment into a brief and genuinely funny exchange that set an easy tone for the rest of the episode.
Whoopi Goldberg and the show’s history with the real Obama
The moment landed with a particular kind of resonance for longtime viewers of the show. Barack Obama appeared on The View in 2020 during the program’s thirteenth season, a visit that produced one of the more memorable audience reactions in the show’s history. The studio gave him a thirty-second standing ovation, a response that reflected both the affection the show’s audience has for him and the significance of a former president sitting down with the cohosts.
Thursday’s incident carried none of that gravity, of course, but it had its own charm. An audience member who simply happened to share a resemblance with one of the most recognizable figures in recent American political history found himself briefly at the center of a live television moment, receiving applause from a roomful of strangers and a warm acknowledgment from one of daytime television’s most recognizable hosts.
It was the kind of unplanned moment that live television occasionally produces, the kind that no producer could have scripted and no rehearsal could have anticipated. And for a few minutes on a Thursday morning, it was exactly what the room needed.

