Kai Trump is beginning to feel the full impact of the pressure that comes with having a well-known last name. The majority of her 18-year-old peers are preoccupied with roommate snoring and dorm assignments. She is concerned about whether or not strangers will allow her to peacefully swing a golf club.
In August of last year, she announced her commitment to the University of Miami on Instagram, as most teenagers do. She expressed her gratitude to her parents, Vanessa and Don, her coaches, her grandfather for providing access to “great courses,” and her mother, Mormor, for believing in her. The post exuded the joyful awkwardness of someone who was truly thrilled. She wrote, “Gooo Canes!” using the extra letters that give these announcements the appearance of being written by a teenager rather than a publicist.
However, the announcement, which was made more than a year before her actual arrival on campus in the fall of 2026, has taken on an odd new life. It has recently resurfaced alongside her comments from Logan Paul’s IMPAULSIVE podcast, where she made a more difficult-to-move statement. “I mean, 50% of the world doesn’t like me because of my last name, but like, they don’t actually know me.” Depending on who is listening, the line will sound different. A complaint is heard by some. Some hear what sounds more like a silent plea.
The Miami commitment and her podcast remarks were presented by some media as a single instance—a “college plea”—but they weren’t. It was an announcement on Instagram. The podcast appearance occurred on a different occasion, months later, in January. Even so, it’s understandable why they were put together. It has a narrative pull. A young woman asks the public not to carry its resentment with her as she leaves for college. It practically writes itself.

The particular incident she described—being approached in public by a stranger who came up to tell her that her grandfather stinks—sticks with you when you watch the IMPAULSIVE clip. With a sort of tired amusement, she repeated her own response on the podcast. “Well, I really appreciate you taking the time to say that. Excellent, what should I say about that? Her tone has an almost antiquated quality. It’s as if she’s already mentally gone through this exchange a hundred times.
She expressed a desire to live in the middle. Neither the radical right nor the radical left. Given that being a Trump in 2026 means being given a position whether you want one or not, it’s unusual and possibly unrealistic for an 18-year-old to express themselves so clearly. Politics doesn’t matter in golf, at least. Wherever you hit the ball, it goes.
Following the opening round of the ANNIKA tournament in November, she stood in front of reporters at Pelican Golf Club in Belleair, Florida. She has already gained more attention than most incoming college freshmen will ever experience thanks to her participation in LPGA events on sponsor exemptions. The exemptions, according to some critics, are more a reflection of her last name than her skill. Some point out that she has earned her access. Both of these could be true.
She’s not really asking for sympathy right now. It’s more akin to a pause. A chance to be perceived as a Trump third, a teenager second, and a golfer first—or perhaps not at all, on the days when she’d prefer to just be Kai. It’s a different story entirely if the world gives her that pause. It doesn’t seem like it will, at least not anytime soon. But she owns the swing, at the very least.
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