The photojournalist said he enjoyed seeing versions of the meme placing Sanders into paintings, particularly when it appears the creator used some extra effort on Photoshop to integrate the senator into the art.ĭuring an interview on "Late Night with Seth Meyers" Thursday, Sanders said he had no idea the photo of him had become an internet sensation. "But it's nice to see people being creative with something." "I don't think any photojournalist is crazy about their work turning into a meme," Smialowski said. Later, when his email and social media notifications blew up, he knew his picture went viral. Smialowski didn't noticed the buzz around his photo right away, he said, but he started getting a few emails from his bosses saying people were having fun with the image. "Most of the comments were people saying 'this is me' or 'mood,' and I'm happy we all relate." "When I saw Bernie's photo, he just reminded me of myself in the back of a meeting, waiting for it to be over," Smalls told CNBC. student at Penn State, shared the photo on Twitter, writing, "This could've been an email." Her tweet has more than 1.1 million likes and 139,700 retweets as of Saturday morning.
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