The president is taking on Beyoncé, boasting that he is a bigger draw than the singer.<br /><br />A capacity crowd of 10,000 people packed The Mohegan Sun Arena in Wilkes Barre, Pennsylvania, where he held a boisterous rally Thursday night.<br /><br />Trump said it was just like his election rallies, bragging that his crowds were bigger than Hillary Clinton’s, even when she brought out her A-list supporters. <br /><br />“She'd bring in Beyoncé and then Jay-Z," he said. "They were drawing crowds smaller than my crowds." <br /><br />Also on Thursday night, Beyoncé and Jay-Z held a concert at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey before more than 50,000 fans. <br /><br />Meanwhile, the QAnon phenomenon was again seen at the Trump appearance, just like in Tampa earlier this week. <br /><br />"No one knows exactly who he is," one Trump supporter said. <br /><br />No one knows for sure who or what Q is, but folks at the rally believe it is a shadowy figure inside the Trump administration who leaks secret information on social media.<br /><br />"Q says it first, then Trump says it," said another Trump rally attendee. <br /><br />One supporter says Q drops clues on the internet and the president repeats them, proving a connection.<br /><br />Jesse Walker, the author of "The United States of Paranoia: A Conspiracy Theory," discussed the Q sensation with Inside Edition. <br /><br />"It is structured like an alternate reality game," he said. "You have someone giving out clues and restructuring the puzzle." <br /><br />Some say the person may be named after Q from the James Bond films, while others believe he's the namesake of a "Star Trek" character. <br /><br />"For all the weirdness of what people who believe in QAnon might espouse, it is not a weird thing to see happen," Walker added. <br /><br />Though the QAnon people are getting a lot of attention now, the group has reportedly existed since about a month before the 2016 election.
