Sean Spicer.Alex Wong/Getty Images
Sean Spicer found himself becoming a meme that went places few — if any — political memes have gone.
After claiming on Saturday that President Donald Trump’s inauguration “was the largest audience to ever witness an inauguration, period, both in-person and around the globe,” — which photographic evidence, at the very least, showed it could not have been — the meme was born.
And it didn’t take long for Spicer to spurn multiple hashtags, have his tweets mined, and see a photo of himself from the press briefing room go viral. There was even a Twitter Moment titled “It’s a fact — Trump’s press secretary has become a meme,” and his five-year-long feud with Dippin’ Dots was unearthed.
Most political memes remain confined to politics Twitter, only being circulated by the Washington elite and journalism class. But the Spicer meme was different — it managed to spill out into the mainstream.
The newly minted White House press secretary was even parodied by the professional sports world.
Spicer attempted to walk back his statement a bit during his Monday press briefing, claiming that he meant the combination of in-person and global viewers was what he meant, but it was too late. The damage was already done.
#SeanSpicerSays that the lying media does not mention the 1,000,000 invisibility cloaks issued to the crowd on inauguration day
— Andy Birss (@1957AJB) January 22, 2017
“The Beatles, INCLUDING John & George, played the inaugural concert and President Trump applauded them with his HUGE HANDS.” #SeanSpicerSays
— Mitch Benn (@MitchBenn) January 22, 2017
“No, I did not become a meme about telling absurd lies after my very first press conference.” – Sean Spicer #SeanSpicerPressReleasespic.twitter.com/GCqfzDt5Eg
— Ben Stadler (@TheBenStadler) January 22, 2017
I wonder if young sean spicer ever dreamed he would one day grow up to become a meme. pic.twitter.com/EBsRbOmSoO
— Erin Brr, sir (@erinscafe) January 22, 2017
Gotta hand it to @PressSec Sean Spicer. Yesterday most people never heard of him. Today he’s a meme. Period. pic.twitter.com/Wlh2BKHAsU
— Jim Roberts (@nycjim) January 22, 2017
The meme hit so hard it went far beyond politics. The NHL’s Dallas Stars claimed on its jumbotron near the end of a Saturday night game that the paid attendance was “1.5 million.”
Stars Jumbotron with a topical joke. pic.twitter.com/9vsmTG1Agj
— Kate Morrison (@unlikelyfanatic) January 22, 2017
Gregg Popovich, the head coach of the NBA’s San Antonio Spurs, also made a point of calling out Spicer on Saturday, and Golden State Warriors coach Steve Kerr invoked a Spicer joke when speaking of his lackluster career with the Orlando Magic after he was addressed as “former Orlando Magic great.”
“Yes, Sean Spicer will be talking about my Magic career any second now,” he told reporters Sunday. “14,000 points, greatest player in Magic history.”
As if breaking through the typically politically-free zone of pro sports was not enough, Spicer found himself being lampooned by video gamers too.
“The Big the Cat sections of Sonic Adventure were very popular. It’s true” pic.twitter.com/qjzmUX8qtE
— ビットソケット (@BitSocket) January 22, 2017
— ReDeYe (@PaulChaloner) January 22, 2017
“Instead of having some sort of bulky gamer headset, you’ll be able to do it right off your smartphone…that’s a pretty sweet solution.” pic.twitter.com/YdnLHwQGTi
— David Abrams (@CheapyD) January 22, 2017
“Killzone 2’s trailer was 100% in-engine footage, period.” – Sean Spicer pic.twitter.com/U9sbj57v93
— Danny O’Dwyer (@dannyodwyer) January 22, 2017
As New York Times reporter Maggie Haberman wrote, the early episode for Spicer looks like it could be a defining mark on his stint as press secretary.
Announcers at an NBA game were making #SpicerFacts jokes this weekend. This moment broke through huge. And can’t be put back in bottle.
— Maggie Haberman (@maggieNYT) January 23, 2017