Lee's list confirms an earlier account by roast comedian Anthony Jeselnik, who told the Hollywood Reporter in June, "Trump's one rule was 'don't say I have less money then I say I do.' "
"His kids were fair game. His wife was fair game. And I remember one of my jokes was about his casino business failing, and I could feel that hurt coming off of him," continued Jeselnik, who said Trump didn't like that last one.
"I called him a douchebag to his face," the comedian recalled, "and that wasn't as harsh as saying 'you don't know how to run a casino.' "
But everything else? He was all smiles.
Jeselnik thought those smiles were fake though, a calculated way for Trump to get more camera time.
But comedian Lisa Lampanelli, who also took shots at Trump that night, including a joke comparing his business acumen to a child with a development disorder, thought Trump could take anything.
"At no point did I think he was actually enjoying himself," explained Jeselnik, who added that even back then Trump had a "game plan" for the night.
"He volunteered for it and it seemed smart in a way. Like, 'let's get the pros out here and really tear me a new one and then in five years when I start to run (for president), these things will kind of punch themselves out.' "