The Moment

Only in Washington could a baby-name reveal collide with a security scare. Mentalist Oz Pearlman, hosting the White House Correspondents’ Dinner at the Washington Hilton, says he was in the middle of a trick when the room erupted. His bit? He’d guessed White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt’s unborn daughter’s name, Viviane, and was showing the written reveal to Melania Trump when loud noises triggered a frantic lockdown.

Oz Pearlman holds up his notepad during a name-reveal trick at the White House Correspondents' Dinner, moments before the security scare.
The trick saw Pearlman ask Leavitt to think of a name before he showed the notepad with Karoline Leavitt’s daughter’s name, Viviane, written down. – Daily Mail US

Pearlman describes the split-second turn: delighted gasps, then chaos. Guests ducked, Secret Service swarmed, and he found himself on the floor, suddenly eye-level with the president. He later praised agents for moving “incredibly fast.” The White House, meanwhile, signaled the dinner will be rescheduled within 30 days. No fatalities were reported.

Guests duck for cover on the ballroom floor at the Washington Hilton during the White House Correspondents' Dinner.
A collection of celebrities, journalists, and other Washington power players duck for cover after shots were fired at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner at the Washington Hilton. – Daily Mail US

Authorities took a suspect into custody at the hotel. Law enforcement identified him as 31-year-old Cole Tomas Allen. Details about exactly what unfolded between the checkpoint and the ballroom are still being sorted in real time.

A shirtless suspect, identified by law enforcement as 31-year-old Cole Tomas Allen, is restrained by officers at the Washington Hilton.
President Trump shared this dramatic image of the shirtless alleged shooter, 31-year-old Cole Tomas Allen, after he was taken down by law enforcement. – Daily Mail US

The Take

I know, “mentalists” and Washington don’t usually share a stage unless we’re talking budget forecasts. But this was a very D.C. kind of surreal: a parlor trick at the exact instant real life intruded. One second you’re guessing baby names; the next you’re under a table counting heartbeats. It’s like a standing ovation cut off by a fire alarm.

Two things can be true. First, the show matters: Pearlman says Leavitt gave him the green light to share the name, which is a necessary boundary in a town allergic to privacy, especially with a mom days from delivery. Second, the response matters more. In a room full of heavy-hitters, the security choreography worked. People went home. That’s the headline you want.

The WHCD has always been celebrity-adjacent, with politics meeting pop culture in tuxes and tweets. This year, it’s a reminder that the line between “bit” and “breaking” is thinner than we like. The Hilton itself carries an eerie history; the same hotel where President Reagan was shot in 1981. Glam comes with ghosts.

Receipts

Confirmed:

  • Oz Pearlman says he revealed Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt’s chosen baby name, “Viviane,” and was showing Melania Trump his notepad when the incident began (on-camera interview, Apr 27, 2026).
  • Pearlman says Leavitt gave him permission to share the name (same interview).
  • Pearlman praised the Secret Service response and described being on the floor near the president (same interview).
  • The White House indicated the dinner will be rescheduled within 30 days (official communication to press, Apr 27, 2026).
  • Pearlman posted on Instagram Story that he returned home safely and hugged his children (Apr 27, 2026).
  • A suspect was arrested at the Washington Hilton; no fatalities reported (law enforcement briefings, Apr 27, 2026).

Unverified/Reported:

  • Specifics about any security “breach” and the exact path of the suspect remain under investigation; charging documents were not yet public at the time of writing.
  • Reports that authorities found a manifesto attributed to the suspect are unconfirmed by publicly released documents.
  • Whether the rescheduled WHCD program will keep Pearlman’s act unchanged is undecided; he has said the tone would likely shift.

Backstory (for Casual Readers)

The White House Correspondents’ Dinner is Washington’s annual roast-and-toast, where politicians, media, and a few Hollywood names trade jokes for one night. Oz Pearlman, known from primetime talent shows and pro-sports halftime mind-reading, was tapped to host. Karoline Leavitt, 28, is the administration’s press secretary and is due to give birth soon. The dinner’s venue, the Washington Hilton, has a long security legacy; it’s the same hotel where President Reagan survived an assassination attempt in 1981.

What’s Next

Expect an updated WHCD date within a month. Look for a formal timeline from the Secret Service and local authorities as they consolidate reports, evidence, and potential charges. If Pearlman returns to host, listen for a recalibrated set, same showman, different tone. And for Leavitt, all eyes are on a far happier headline: baby Viviane’s arrival.

What detail from this night will stick in the culture longer, the mind-reading reveal or the reminder that even our glittery rituals run on split-second resolve?

Sources:

  • Oz Pearlman televised interview (Apr 27, 2026).
  • Oz Pearlman via Instagram Stories (Apr 27, 2026).
  • Official White House statement to press regarding rescheduling (Apr 27, 2026).
  • U.S. Secret Service public updates on the incident (Apr 27, 2026).
  • The President’s social media post sharing an image from the scene (Apr 27, 2026).

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