Against all reason, social media lit up Monday night over a photo of Kellyanne Conway in the Oval Office with her shoes on the couch. The “scandal” quickly turned from a Twitter fight into a meme and quickly disappeared beneath coverage of the president’s upcoming address to Congress.
Nevertheless, a few articles made it into publication, including a piece on Broadly that enlisted a body language expert to analyze Conway’s position in the photo.
A body language expert decodes Kellyanne Conway’s feet-on-couch scandal https://t.co/34DQrf8G1i pic.twitter.com/Df6fJKptlj
— VICE Identity (@broadly) February 28, 2017
https://twitter.com/entropyfortw/status/836705125032919041
"scandal" MT @broadly A body language expert decodes Kellyanne Conway’s feet-on-couch scandal
— ?It's?Almost ⛄️Christmas? (@jtLOL) February 28, 2017
scandal? ?
— P_Blue (@blue8505) February 28, 2017
So, what was the expert’s conclusion? If you could see our body language, the absence of any attempt to click on the Broadly piece would strongly suggest a complete lack of interest. How excited do you think your average body language expert gets when the phone rings, anyway?
Today's "news" . pic.twitter.com/C1AiOtalZE
— MethLabOfDemocracy⭐️⭐️⭐️⚜️ (@noprezzie2012) February 28, 2017
Recommended
— kidwoohda (@kidwoohdaa) February 28, 2017
In my body language expert opinion, she was checking the picture she just took of honored White House guests. ?
— ??DVن⭐️⭐️⭐️ (@psycho4ensics1) February 28, 2017
https://twitter.com/NickIsani/status/836708730204999680
Body Language experts are the worst kind of experts
— smooth (@smoothmedia) February 28, 2017
Ladies, you have problems.
— WaxMyBalls (@ShillForHillary) February 28, 2017
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Related:
Voxsplained: Good listener Hillary Clinton hobbled by male campaign tradition of speaking https://t.co/Z2HRuJNTmk
— Twitchy Team (@TwitchyTeam) July 11, 2016
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