look in the tweet replies for more examples
The "Dark Brandon" meme was started as an ironic joke by Twitter leftists mocking conservatives who share memes of Trump dressed as rambo non-ironically. The second tweet is the basis for the joke. pic.twitter.com/taNUcJytqR
— andrew kaczynski (@KFILE) August 8, 2022
"The eagle is not, and was never intended to be the reichsadler," Stone told the outlet, referring to the eagle. "It was just intended to be a representation of America's national bird, the bald eagle, and any reasonable person would interpret it as such." https://t.co/gjfJgSSYAd
— Matthew Yglesias (@mattyglesias) August 8, 2022
Would really love to eavesdrop on the conversation where this was explained to Joe Biden https://t.co/n3uIqKda24
— Ben Jacobs (@Bencjacobs) August 7, 2022
Agreed. This is why Dark Brandon works: because it's Joe-freaking-Biden, the moderate's moderate for 50 years, a grandpa who likes cycling and ice cream and thinks Delaware is a nice place. He cannot be cringed, but he can make edgy things cringe, and he should. https://t.co/2KjfcDo1IT
— Max Kennerly (@MaxKennerly) August 8, 2022
The “Dark Brandon” meme is probably one of the most organic and effect repurposing of a negative slogan I’ve seen in a long time.
— Maya Contreras (@mayatcontreras) August 7, 2022
Good job, y’all. pic.twitter.com/9ZZn1oCThc
What’s the headline going to look like on the New York Times explainer piece on “Dark Brandon.” pic.twitter.com/mHrwJi74Ru
— Ray Wert (@raywert) August 7, 2022