A Drive Into Deep Left Field By Castellanos

2020Copypasta / bait-and-switchactive

Also known as: Castellanos Home Run Copypasta · Man of Faith Copypasta · Brennaman Apology Meme

A Drive Into Deep Left Field By Castellanos is a 2020 bait-and-switch copypasta originating when Cincinnati Reds announcer Thom Brennaman interrupted an on-air apology to call a Nick Castellanos home run, sparking countless variations.

"A Drive Into Deep Left Field By Castellanos" is a copypasta and bait-and-switch meme born from one of the most surreal moments in baseball broadcasting history. On August 19, 2020, Cincinnati Reds announcer Thom Brennaman attempted to apologize on air for using a homophobic slur, only to instinctively interrupt his own apology to call a Nick Castellanos home run mid-sentence2. The clip spawned a copypasta format where people insert the home run call into the middle of serious statements, fake apologies, and somber news updates, and it still gets deployed every time Castellanos goes deep during a notable event8.

TL;DR

"A Drive Into Deep Left Field By Castellanos" is a copypasta and bait-and-switch meme born from one of the most surreal moments in baseball broadcasting history.

Overview

The meme centers on a specific passage from Brennaman's on-air apology, where he says "I pride myself and think of myself as a man of faith" before cutting himself off to call Castellanos's home run in the exact same somber monotone4. The full quote runs from the apology through the play-by-play and back into the apology, creating a jarring tonal collision between a man's career unraveling and the routine mechanics of calling a baseball game.

In copypasta form, users write out a serious or sincere-sounding message and interrupt it partway through with "as there's a drive into deep left field by Castellanos and that'll be a home run. And so that'll make it a 4-0 ballgame." The format works as both a bait-and-switch punchline and a way to mock insincere public apologies2. ESPN's Pablo Torre compared the original moment to "listening to the band play on as the Titanic was sinking. Except the band was also somehow the iceberg"2.

During the first game of a Wednesday doubleheader between the Cincinnati Reds and Kansas City Royals on August 19, 2020, play-by-play announcer Thom Brennaman was caught on a hot mic calling an unidentified city "one of the fag capitals of the world"1. Brennaman was broadcasting remotely from Great American Ball Park in Cincinnati due to COVID-19 travel restrictions, and the slur was picked up only on the MLB.tv out-of-market stream, not on the main Fox Sports Ohio cable feed6. According to David J. Halberstam, who later interviewed Brennaman, the city in question was San Francisco6.

The comment went viral on social media during the second game. By the top of the fifth inning, Brennaman's bosses pulled him off the broadcast4. Before handing duties to Jim Day, Brennaman was given the chance to apologize. As he launched into his statement, Reds right fielder Nick Castellanos stepped up to face Royals reliever Greg Holland2.

Brennaman began: "I made a comment earlier tonight that I guess went out over the air that I am deeply ashamed of. If I have hurt anyone out there, I can't tell you how much I say from the bottom of my heart, I'm so very, very sorry. I pride myself and think of myself as a man of faith..."6

At that exact moment, Castellanos crushed a Holland fastball 410 feet over the left-center field fence2. Three decades of broadcasting instinct kicked in, and Brennaman seamlessly pivoted: "...as there's a drive into deep left field by Castellanos, it will be a home run, and so that'll make it a 4-0 ballgame"6. He then returned to his apology without missing a beat: "I don't know if I'm gonna be putting on this headset again."

Twitter user @allairematt posted the clip shortly after it aired, picking up over 3,000 retweets and 15,000 likes5. Adding to the absurdity, the ball landed directly next to a Planet Fitness billboard reading "judgement-free zone"2.

Origin & Background

Platform
Fox Sports Ohio (broadcast), Twitter (viral spread)
Key People
Thom Brennaman, Nick Castellanos, @allairematt
Date
2020
Year
2020

During the first game of a Wednesday doubleheader between the Cincinnati Reds and Kansas City Royals on August 19, 2020, play-by-play announcer Thom Brennaman was caught on a hot mic calling an unidentified city "one of the fag capitals of the world". Brennaman was broadcasting remotely from Great American Ball Park in Cincinnati due to COVID-19 travel restrictions, and the slur was picked up only on the MLB.tv out-of-market stream, not on the main Fox Sports Ohio cable feed. According to David J. Halberstam, who later interviewed Brennaman, the city in question was San Francisco.

The comment went viral on social media during the second game. By the top of the fifth inning, Brennaman's bosses pulled him off the broadcast. Before handing duties to Jim Day, Brennaman was given the chance to apologize. As he launched into his statement, Reds right fielder Nick Castellanos stepped up to face Royals reliever Greg Holland.

Brennaman began: "I made a comment earlier tonight that I guess went out over the air that I am deeply ashamed of. If I have hurt anyone out there, I can't tell you how much I say from the bottom of my heart, I'm so very, very sorry. I pride myself and think of myself as a man of faith..."

At that exact moment, Castellanos crushed a Holland fastball 410 feet over the left-center field fence. Three decades of broadcasting instinct kicked in, and Brennaman seamlessly pivoted: "...as there's a drive into deep left field by Castellanos, it will be a home run, and so that'll make it a 4-0 ballgame". He then returned to his apology without missing a beat: "I don't know if I'm gonna be putting on this headset again."

Twitter user @allairematt posted the clip shortly after it aired, picking up over 3,000 retweets and 15,000 likes. Adding to the absurdity, the ball landed directly next to a Planet Fitness billboard reading "judgement-free zone".

How It Spread

The clip went viral immediately, but the copypasta format took longer to crystallize. As The Ringer noted, there's a "Mandela Effect-like" quality to the timeline: the phrase was spoken on August 19, but the copypasta didn't truly explode until over a month later.

The Reds suspended Brennaman the night of the incident. Fox Sports announced the next day that he would no longer call their NFL broadcasts. For the next five weeks, the clip circulated widely, but mostly as a straight video share rather than a text format.

On September 25, 2020, Brennaman officially resigned from the Reds. The team's statement on Twitter called him "a fantastic talent and a good man," and that's when the floodgates opened. Hundreds of users replied to the Reds' tweet by starting a sincere-seeming response and dropping the home run call in the middle. The Defector documented the pile-on, noting replies like: "Y'all, this is a Serious tweet from the Reds and I expect more from you, as there's a drive into deep left field by Castellanos and that'll be a homerun".

Within a week, the format expanded beyond baseball. On October 2, 2020, Twitter user @RichardStaff used the copypasta to parody Donald Trump's announcement that he had tested positive for COVID-19, earning over 3,100 retweets and 23,000 likes. User @luoldengmvp applied it to tweets wishing Trump and Melania well, pulling in over 4,000 likes.

By early 2021, the format was fully established across Twitter. Journalist Jen Mac Ramos, described by The Ringer as "one of the foremost copypasta practitioners," called it "kind of like this decade's Rickroll". Social psychologist Dr. Rosanna Guadagno of Stanford framed the appeal differently: "If you want to call bullshit on someone, this is how you respond".

How to Use This Meme

The copypasta typically works in one of two ways:

Bait-and-switch format: Write a sincere, serious, or emotional statement. Partway through a sentence, pivot without warning into "as there's a drive into deep left field by Castellanos and that'll be a home run. And so that'll make it a 4-0 ballgame. I don't know if I'll be putting on this headset again." Then optionally return to the serious tone.

Real-time deployment: When something somber or significant is happening in the news and Castellanos is scheduled to play, post some variation of the call the instant he does anything noteworthy. The joke lands hardest when Castellanos actually hits a home run during a major event, which happens with eerie frequency.

Common conventions include opening with "I pride myself and think of myself as a man of faith" to signal the meme early, or burying the transition deeper in a paragraph so readers don't see it coming. The format works best when the surrounding text is genuinely serious or when it mimics the structure of a corporate apology.

Cultural Impact

The copypasta broke out of baseball fandom faster than most sports memes. It became a standard response template on Twitter for mocking insincere public apologies, corporate non-statements, and political doublespeak. The format works because it does two things at once: it's funny on its own as a non sequitur, and it implicitly compares whatever you're interrupting to Brennaman's situation.

The meme crossed into real-world spaces. The bathroom wall transcription at Brown Truck Brewery in High Point, North Carolina, written out in full from memory (or from a phone), represents how deeply the copypasta embedded itself in internet-native culture.

Professional sports broadcasting acknowledged the meme directly. Adam Amin's deliberate callback during a Fox Sports broadcast in London showed the phrase had become part of baseball's shared vocabulary. Castellanos's own Instagram embrace in 2023 confirmed the player was in on the joke.

Dr. Rosanna Guadagno, a social psychologist at Stanford who studies online influence, identified the copypasta as a form of group cultural critique: a shared tool for calling out perceived insincerity that signals in-group membership among those who recognize it. The Ringer compared the dynamic to Rickrolling but noted the Castellanos copypasta carries an editorial point of view that Rick Astley links don't.

Gambling culture picked up on the pattern too, with some bettors targeting the Castellanos home run prop every time major news breaks.

Full History

The meme drew its staying power from two factors: the inherent comedy of the original clip and Nick Castellanos's uncanny habit of hitting home runs during somber moments.

The first documented instance of Castellanos going deep during something significant actually predates the Brennaman incident by nearly a decade. On May 1, 2011, a teenage Castellanos hit his first professional home run while playing for the single-A West Michigan Whitecaps. That was the same day Osama bin Laden was killed. Nobody connected those dots until later, but in hindsight, the pattern was already forming.

After the Brennaman clip went mainstream in late 2020, fans started paying close attention to Castellanos's at-bats during notable events. On September 11, 2021, the anniversary of the terrorist attacks, Castellanos hit a home run. A few months earlier, at Kauffman Stadium against the same Kansas City Royals, a broadcast attempted to eulogize George A. Gorman, a World War II veteran, and Castellanos drove one to left-center. The coincidences kept stacking up.

When Castellanos signed with the Philadelphia Phillies in 2022, the meme followed him. His first spring training hit came as the opposing Blue Jays' broadcast discussed pitching coach Pete Walker's DUI. The day after Will Smith slapped Chris Rock at the 2023 Oscars, Castellanos hit his first Phillies home run in spring training. On Memorial Day 2022, Phillies announcer Tom McCarthy barely got the words "ultimate sacrifice" out of his mouth before Castellanos hit a solo shot.

One notable exception to the pattern: the death of Queen Elizabeth II on September 8, 2022. Castellanos was on the injured list from September 2 to September 26 and missed the team's tribute. Fans made fake edits of Castellanos homering during the memorial anyway, and some were convincing enough that people believed they were real.

The meme's physical-world presence grew too. At Brown Truck Brewery in High Point, North Carolina, someone wrote out the entire Brennaman apology in Sharpie on a shelf above a urinal. The discovery prompted a local writer to muse about the line between internet culture and real life, noting that "some guy wrote 'LAME' right in the middle of that paragraph. He didn't understand the meme. But maybe he's the one who gets it".

Both Nick and Jessica Castellanos acknowledged the joke publicly. In 2021, Jessica posted on Twitter asking people to stop. Nick leaned into it with a February 2023 Instagram post showing him practicing his swing, captioned "And there's a deep drive... Phillies '23". The plea and the embrace existed side by side.

Professional broadcasters started referencing the meme on air. On June 8, 2024, Fox Sports announcer Adam Amin called a Castellanos home run in London with the words "There's a deep drive to left field in London," a deliberate nod to Brennaman's original call. When the CW announced on July 21, 2024, that Brennaman would return to broadcasting as the lead commentator for CW Football Saturday, Castellanos hit a home run that same day. The commentator of that game repeated Brennaman's famous phrase.

During the 2023 MLB postseason, Castellanos tied for the playoffs lead with four home runs and became the first player in postseason history to hit two home runs in back-to-back games, keeping the meme in constant circulation on social media. By 2024, some fans were placing bets on Castellanos home run props whenever major news broke.

Brennaman himself addressed the meme's legacy in a November 2021 podcast, saying: "But for people to criticize a sincere apology... That's when you know that there is a lot wrong with a lot of people". He spent the intervening years working with LGBTQ outreach groups including the Children's Home of Northern Kentucky and PFLAG. He called Roberto Clemente League games in Puerto Rico and high school sports in Cincinnati before his 2024 CW return. During his first CW football broadcast ahead of a Boston College vs. Syracuse game, Brennaman alluded to the incident while discussing both teams' quarterbacks, placing emphasis on the surname of an unrelated player named Castellanos.

Fun Facts

The homophobic slur was only picked up on the out-of-market MLB.tv stream, not the main Fox Sports Ohio cable broadcast. Most Reds fans in Cincinnati didn't hear it live.

Castellanos's home run ball landed directly next to a Planet Fitness billboard reading "judgement-free zone," a detail that often gets lost in retellings.

The copypasta didn't truly go viral until September 25, 2020, over five weeks after the original broadcast. The Brennaman resignation triggered the format, not the clip itself.

Castellanos's first professional home run on May 1, 2011, coincided with the killing of Osama bin Laden. Nobody noticed the pattern for nearly a decade.

Someone wrote the entire Brennaman apology in Sharpie on a shelf above a urinal at a North Carolina brewery. Another person wrote "LAME" through the middle of it.

Derivatives & Variations

Real-time Castellanos watch:

Fans monitor Castellanos's game schedule against the news cycle, posting the copypasta preemptively or the instant he connects. This evolved from joke to genuine superstition to actual betting strategy[8].

Fake memorial edits:

During Queen Elizabeth II's death, when Castellanos was on the injured list, fans created convincing video edits of him homering during the tribute. Some were realistic enough to fool people[8].

Broadcaster callbacks:

Other announcers began referencing the call during Castellanos at-bats. Adam Amin's "deep drive to left field in London" during a 2024 game in England is the most prominent example[11].

Physical-world copypasta:

The format migrated off screens entirely, with at least one documented case of the full apology text hand-written on a bathroom wall at a North Carolina brewery[9].

Brennaman self-reference:

During his 2024 return to broadcasting on CW Football Saturday, Brennaman himself alluded to the incident by emphasizing the surname of an unrelated player named Castellanos[6].

Frequently Asked Questions

A Drive Into Deep Left Field By Castellanos

2020Copypasta / bait-and-switchactive

Also known as: Castellanos Home Run Copypasta · Man of Faith Copypasta · Brennaman Apology Meme

A Drive Into Deep Left Field By Castellanos is a 2020 bait-and-switch copypasta originating when Cincinnati Reds announcer Thom Brennaman interrupted an on-air apology to call a Nick Castellanos home run, sparking countless variations.

"A Drive Into Deep Left Field By Castellanos" is a copypasta and bait-and-switch meme born from one of the most surreal moments in baseball broadcasting history. On August 19, 2020, Cincinnati Reds announcer Thom Brennaman attempted to apologize on air for using a homophobic slur, only to instinctively interrupt his own apology to call a Nick Castellanos home run mid-sentence. The clip spawned a copypasta format where people insert the home run call into the middle of serious statements, fake apologies, and somber news updates, and it still gets deployed every time Castellanos goes deep during a notable event.

TL;DR

"A Drive Into Deep Left Field By Castellanos" is a copypasta and bait-and-switch meme born from one of the most surreal moments in baseball broadcasting history.

Overview

The meme centers on a specific passage from Brennaman's on-air apology, where he says "I pride myself and think of myself as a man of faith" before cutting himself off to call Castellanos's home run in the exact same somber monotone. The full quote runs from the apology through the play-by-play and back into the apology, creating a jarring tonal collision between a man's career unraveling and the routine mechanics of calling a baseball game.

In copypasta form, users write out a serious or sincere-sounding message and interrupt it partway through with "as there's a drive into deep left field by Castellanos and that'll be a home run. And so that'll make it a 4-0 ballgame." The format works as both a bait-and-switch punchline and a way to mock insincere public apologies. ESPN's Pablo Torre compared the original moment to "listening to the band play on as the Titanic was sinking. Except the band was also somehow the iceberg".

During the first game of a Wednesday doubleheader between the Cincinnati Reds and Kansas City Royals on August 19, 2020, play-by-play announcer Thom Brennaman was caught on a hot mic calling an unidentified city "one of the fag capitals of the world". Brennaman was broadcasting remotely from Great American Ball Park in Cincinnati due to COVID-19 travel restrictions, and the slur was picked up only on the MLB.tv out-of-market stream, not on the main Fox Sports Ohio cable feed. According to David J. Halberstam, who later interviewed Brennaman, the city in question was San Francisco.

The comment went viral on social media during the second game. By the top of the fifth inning, Brennaman's bosses pulled him off the broadcast. Before handing duties to Jim Day, Brennaman was given the chance to apologize. As he launched into his statement, Reds right fielder Nick Castellanos stepped up to face Royals reliever Greg Holland.

Brennaman began: "I made a comment earlier tonight that I guess went out over the air that I am deeply ashamed of. If I have hurt anyone out there, I can't tell you how much I say from the bottom of my heart, I'm so very, very sorry. I pride myself and think of myself as a man of faith..."

At that exact moment, Castellanos crushed a Holland fastball 410 feet over the left-center field fence. Three decades of broadcasting instinct kicked in, and Brennaman seamlessly pivoted: "...as there's a drive into deep left field by Castellanos, it will be a home run, and so that'll make it a 4-0 ballgame". He then returned to his apology without missing a beat: "I don't know if I'm gonna be putting on this headset again."

Twitter user @allairematt posted the clip shortly after it aired, picking up over 3,000 retweets and 15,000 likes. Adding to the absurdity, the ball landed directly next to a Planet Fitness billboard reading "judgement-free zone".

Origin & Background

Platform
Fox Sports Ohio (broadcast), Twitter (viral spread)
Key People
Thom Brennaman, Nick Castellanos, @allairematt
Date
2020
Year
2020

During the first game of a Wednesday doubleheader between the Cincinnati Reds and Kansas City Royals on August 19, 2020, play-by-play announcer Thom Brennaman was caught on a hot mic calling an unidentified city "one of the fag capitals of the world". Brennaman was broadcasting remotely from Great American Ball Park in Cincinnati due to COVID-19 travel restrictions, and the slur was picked up only on the MLB.tv out-of-market stream, not on the main Fox Sports Ohio cable feed. According to David J. Halberstam, who later interviewed Brennaman, the city in question was San Francisco.

The comment went viral on social media during the second game. By the top of the fifth inning, Brennaman's bosses pulled him off the broadcast. Before handing duties to Jim Day, Brennaman was given the chance to apologize. As he launched into his statement, Reds right fielder Nick Castellanos stepped up to face Royals reliever Greg Holland.

Brennaman began: "I made a comment earlier tonight that I guess went out over the air that I am deeply ashamed of. If I have hurt anyone out there, I can't tell you how much I say from the bottom of my heart, I'm so very, very sorry. I pride myself and think of myself as a man of faith..."

At that exact moment, Castellanos crushed a Holland fastball 410 feet over the left-center field fence. Three decades of broadcasting instinct kicked in, and Brennaman seamlessly pivoted: "...as there's a drive into deep left field by Castellanos, it will be a home run, and so that'll make it a 4-0 ballgame". He then returned to his apology without missing a beat: "I don't know if I'm gonna be putting on this headset again."

Twitter user @allairematt posted the clip shortly after it aired, picking up over 3,000 retweets and 15,000 likes. Adding to the absurdity, the ball landed directly next to a Planet Fitness billboard reading "judgement-free zone".

How It Spread

The clip went viral immediately, but the copypasta format took longer to crystallize. As The Ringer noted, there's a "Mandela Effect-like" quality to the timeline: the phrase was spoken on August 19, but the copypasta didn't truly explode until over a month later.

The Reds suspended Brennaman the night of the incident. Fox Sports announced the next day that he would no longer call their NFL broadcasts. For the next five weeks, the clip circulated widely, but mostly as a straight video share rather than a text format.

On September 25, 2020, Brennaman officially resigned from the Reds. The team's statement on Twitter called him "a fantastic talent and a good man," and that's when the floodgates opened. Hundreds of users replied to the Reds' tweet by starting a sincere-seeming response and dropping the home run call in the middle. The Defector documented the pile-on, noting replies like: "Y'all, this is a Serious tweet from the Reds and I expect more from you, as there's a drive into deep left field by Castellanos and that'll be a homerun".

Within a week, the format expanded beyond baseball. On October 2, 2020, Twitter user @RichardStaff used the copypasta to parody Donald Trump's announcement that he had tested positive for COVID-19, earning over 3,100 retweets and 23,000 likes. User @luoldengmvp applied it to tweets wishing Trump and Melania well, pulling in over 4,000 likes.

By early 2021, the format was fully established across Twitter. Journalist Jen Mac Ramos, described by The Ringer as "one of the foremost copypasta practitioners," called it "kind of like this decade's Rickroll". Social psychologist Dr. Rosanna Guadagno of Stanford framed the appeal differently: "If you want to call bullshit on someone, this is how you respond".

How to Use This Meme

The copypasta typically works in one of two ways:

Bait-and-switch format: Write a sincere, serious, or emotional statement. Partway through a sentence, pivot without warning into "as there's a drive into deep left field by Castellanos and that'll be a home run. And so that'll make it a 4-0 ballgame. I don't know if I'll be putting on this headset again." Then optionally return to the serious tone.

Real-time deployment: When something somber or significant is happening in the news and Castellanos is scheduled to play, post some variation of the call the instant he does anything noteworthy. The joke lands hardest when Castellanos actually hits a home run during a major event, which happens with eerie frequency.

Common conventions include opening with "I pride myself and think of myself as a man of faith" to signal the meme early, or burying the transition deeper in a paragraph so readers don't see it coming. The format works best when the surrounding text is genuinely serious or when it mimics the structure of a corporate apology.

Cultural Impact

The copypasta broke out of baseball fandom faster than most sports memes. It became a standard response template on Twitter for mocking insincere public apologies, corporate non-statements, and political doublespeak. The format works because it does two things at once: it's funny on its own as a non sequitur, and it implicitly compares whatever you're interrupting to Brennaman's situation.

The meme crossed into real-world spaces. The bathroom wall transcription at Brown Truck Brewery in High Point, North Carolina, written out in full from memory (or from a phone), represents how deeply the copypasta embedded itself in internet-native culture.

Professional sports broadcasting acknowledged the meme directly. Adam Amin's deliberate callback during a Fox Sports broadcast in London showed the phrase had become part of baseball's shared vocabulary. Castellanos's own Instagram embrace in 2023 confirmed the player was in on the joke.

Dr. Rosanna Guadagno, a social psychologist at Stanford who studies online influence, identified the copypasta as a form of group cultural critique: a shared tool for calling out perceived insincerity that signals in-group membership among those who recognize it. The Ringer compared the dynamic to Rickrolling but noted the Castellanos copypasta carries an editorial point of view that Rick Astley links don't.

Gambling culture picked up on the pattern too, with some bettors targeting the Castellanos home run prop every time major news breaks.

Full History

The meme drew its staying power from two factors: the inherent comedy of the original clip and Nick Castellanos's uncanny habit of hitting home runs during somber moments.

The first documented instance of Castellanos going deep during something significant actually predates the Brennaman incident by nearly a decade. On May 1, 2011, a teenage Castellanos hit his first professional home run while playing for the single-A West Michigan Whitecaps. That was the same day Osama bin Laden was killed. Nobody connected those dots until later, but in hindsight, the pattern was already forming.

After the Brennaman clip went mainstream in late 2020, fans started paying close attention to Castellanos's at-bats during notable events. On September 11, 2021, the anniversary of the terrorist attacks, Castellanos hit a home run. A few months earlier, at Kauffman Stadium against the same Kansas City Royals, a broadcast attempted to eulogize George A. Gorman, a World War II veteran, and Castellanos drove one to left-center. The coincidences kept stacking up.

When Castellanos signed with the Philadelphia Phillies in 2022, the meme followed him. His first spring training hit came as the opposing Blue Jays' broadcast discussed pitching coach Pete Walker's DUI. The day after Will Smith slapped Chris Rock at the 2023 Oscars, Castellanos hit his first Phillies home run in spring training. On Memorial Day 2022, Phillies announcer Tom McCarthy barely got the words "ultimate sacrifice" out of his mouth before Castellanos hit a solo shot.

One notable exception to the pattern: the death of Queen Elizabeth II on September 8, 2022. Castellanos was on the injured list from September 2 to September 26 and missed the team's tribute. Fans made fake edits of Castellanos homering during the memorial anyway, and some were convincing enough that people believed they were real.

The meme's physical-world presence grew too. At Brown Truck Brewery in High Point, North Carolina, someone wrote out the entire Brennaman apology in Sharpie on a shelf above a urinal. The discovery prompted a local writer to muse about the line between internet culture and real life, noting that "some guy wrote 'LAME' right in the middle of that paragraph. He didn't understand the meme. But maybe he's the one who gets it".

Both Nick and Jessica Castellanos acknowledged the joke publicly. In 2021, Jessica posted on Twitter asking people to stop. Nick leaned into it with a February 2023 Instagram post showing him practicing his swing, captioned "And there's a deep drive... Phillies '23". The plea and the embrace existed side by side.

Professional broadcasters started referencing the meme on air. On June 8, 2024, Fox Sports announcer Adam Amin called a Castellanos home run in London with the words "There's a deep drive to left field in London," a deliberate nod to Brennaman's original call. When the CW announced on July 21, 2024, that Brennaman would return to broadcasting as the lead commentator for CW Football Saturday, Castellanos hit a home run that same day. The commentator of that game repeated Brennaman's famous phrase.

During the 2023 MLB postseason, Castellanos tied for the playoffs lead with four home runs and became the first player in postseason history to hit two home runs in back-to-back games, keeping the meme in constant circulation on social media. By 2024, some fans were placing bets on Castellanos home run props whenever major news broke.

Brennaman himself addressed the meme's legacy in a November 2021 podcast, saying: "But for people to criticize a sincere apology... That's when you know that there is a lot wrong with a lot of people". He spent the intervening years working with LGBTQ outreach groups including the Children's Home of Northern Kentucky and PFLAG. He called Roberto Clemente League games in Puerto Rico and high school sports in Cincinnati before his 2024 CW return. During his first CW football broadcast ahead of a Boston College vs. Syracuse game, Brennaman alluded to the incident while discussing both teams' quarterbacks, placing emphasis on the surname of an unrelated player named Castellanos.

Fun Facts

The homophobic slur was only picked up on the out-of-market MLB.tv stream, not the main Fox Sports Ohio cable broadcast. Most Reds fans in Cincinnati didn't hear it live.

Castellanos's home run ball landed directly next to a Planet Fitness billboard reading "judgement-free zone," a detail that often gets lost in retellings.

The copypasta didn't truly go viral until September 25, 2020, over five weeks after the original broadcast. The Brennaman resignation triggered the format, not the clip itself.

Castellanos's first professional home run on May 1, 2011, coincided with the killing of Osama bin Laden. Nobody noticed the pattern for nearly a decade.

Someone wrote the entire Brennaman apology in Sharpie on a shelf above a urinal at a North Carolina brewery. Another person wrote "LAME" through the middle of it.

Derivatives & Variations

Real-time Castellanos watch:

Fans monitor Castellanos's game schedule against the news cycle, posting the copypasta preemptively or the instant he connects. This evolved from joke to genuine superstition to actual betting strategy[8].

Fake memorial edits:

During Queen Elizabeth II's death, when Castellanos was on the injured list, fans created convincing video edits of him homering during the tribute. Some were realistic enough to fool people[8].

Broadcaster callbacks:

Other announcers began referencing the call during Castellanos at-bats. Adam Amin's "deep drive to left field in London" during a 2024 game in England is the most prominent example[11].

Physical-world copypasta:

The format migrated off screens entirely, with at least one documented case of the full apology text hand-written on a bathroom wall at a North Carolina brewery[9].

Brennaman self-reference:

During his 2024 return to broadcasting on CW Football Saturday, Brennaman himself alluded to the incident by emphasizing the surname of an unrelated player named Castellanos[6].

Frequently Asked Questions