When One America News Network aired the film, they included the following disclaimer, "Michael James Lindell purchased the airtime for the broadcast of this program on One American News (OAN) network. Mr. Lindell is the sole author and executive producer of this program and is solely and exclusively responsible for its content. The topic of this broadcast is the 2020 election. OAN has undertaken its own reporting on this topic. This program is not the product of OAN's reporting. The views, opinions, and claims expressed in this program by Mr. Lindell and other guests, presenters, producers, or advertisers are theirs and theirs alone, and are not adopted or endorsed by OAN or its owners. In particular, OAN does not adopt or endorse any statements or opinions in this program regarding the following entities or people: US Dominion Inc. (and any related entities), Smartmatic USA Corp., Brian Kemp, Brad Raffensperger, or Gabriel Sterling. Further, the statements and claims expressed in this program are presented of this time as opinions only and are not intended to be taken or interpreted by the viewer as established facts. The results in the 2020 Presidential election remain disputed and questioned by millions of Americans who are entitled to hear from all sides in order to help determine what may have happened."
This is the second documentary to win Worst Picture at the Golden Raspberry Awards, better known as the Razzies; the first was Hillary's America: The Secret History of the Democratic Party (2016). It was not eligible for Worst Screenplay because no screenwriters are credited. Mike Lindell also won for Worst Performance in a Leading Role (Worst Actor).
YouTube banned the film on February 7, 2021, for violating the company's presidential election integrity policy. It prohibits false claims that widespread fraud, errors, or glitches changed the outcome of the vote during the 2020 Presidential election.
Mike Lindell asked Clint Eastwood to direct the film, unaware that Eastwood only directs narrative nonfiction and does not make documentaries. The producers stressed that his salary was 100 times the budget, and that Lindell's conduct would likely not sit well with Eastwood's penchant for quickly wrapping production on his films.
In a decision dated April 20, 2023, an arbitration panel ruled that software developer Robert Zeidman had won Mike Lindell's 2021 contest challenging experts to prove that data he had was not from the 2020 election, and directed Lindell to pay Zeidman the $5 million reward within 30 days. The data that Lindell claimed was proof of 2020 presidential election fraud was a meaningless jumble of random words and numbers.