Donald Trumps Sad Tweets

2015Catchphrase / Twitter behaviorclassic

Also known as: Sad! · Trump "Sad!" · Trump's Sad Tweets

Donald Trump's Sad Tweets is a 2015 Twitter meme featuring the presidential candidate's signature habit of ending posts with the blunt, dismissive one-word sign-off "Sad!

Donald Trump's "Sad" Tweets refers to the 45th U.S. president's habit of ending Twitter posts with the word "Sad!" as a blunt, dismissive punctuation mark. The pattern picked up steam during his 2015-2016 presidential campaign and quickly became one of his most recognizable rhetorical tics online. Data scientists and media outlets studied the phenomenon extensively, turning a simple one-word sign-off into a widely parodied and imitated meme format.

TL;DR

Donald Trump's "Sad" Tweets refers to the 45th U.S.

Overview

During his 2016 presidential campaign and beyond, Donald Trump developed a distinctive Twitter habit: ending tweets with the single word "Sad!" (almost always with an exclamation point). The tweets typically followed a formula. Trump would criticize a person, organization, or media outlet, then cap the message with "Sad!" as a final, punchy verdict. The word functioned less as an expression of genuine sadness and more as a rhetorical weapon, a dismissive mic-drop meant to signal that whatever he was criticizing was beneath him.

The pattern was unmistakable enough that data scientists at Northeastern University identified it as a signature element of Trump's personal tweeting style, distinct from tweets posted by his campaign staff2. Researcher Katherine Ognyanova called ending tweets with "sad!" a defining Trump move1.

Trump's earliest notable use of "Sad!" as a tweet-ender came on June 19, 2015, just days after launching his presidential campaign. He tweeted that watching The Today Show host Brian Williams was "very sad!". The format was simple: observation or attack, followed by a one-word judgment.

By November 13, 2015, the pattern was clearly established. Trump posted a tweet criticizing Republican primary rival Carly Fiorina for making "false statements" about him, ending the message with "sad". What started as an occasional flourish became a reliable formula throughout the campaign.

Origin & Background

Platform
Twitter (source behavior), Media coverage (viral spread)
Creator
Donald Trump
Date
2015
Year
2015

Trump's earliest notable use of "Sad!" as a tweet-ender came on June 19, 2015, just days after launching his presidential campaign. He tweeted that watching The Today Show host Brian Williams was "very sad!". The format was simple: observation or attack, followed by a one-word judgment.

By November 13, 2015, the pattern was clearly established. Trump posted a tweet criticizing Republican primary rival Carly Fiorina for making "false statements" about him, ending the message with "sad". What started as an occasional flourish became a reliable formula throughout the campaign.

How It Spread

Media attention turned Trump's "Sad!" habit from a quirky tic into a documented cultural artifact. On January 22, 2016, Slate published a post collecting nine Trump tweets that ended with "sad!". Six weeks later, on March 3, The Washington Post ran a listicle titled "47 Things That Have Made Donald Trump 'Sad' Since He Launched His Campaign," cataloging the sheer range of targets Trump had labeled with the word.

On March 20, 2016, a Quora user submitted the question "Why does Trump use 'Sad!' so much in his tweets?", showing the habit had entered public curiosity. Then on April 23, 2016, Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton flipped the script, posting a tweet about Trump that ended with "Sad!" The tweet picked up over 2,700 likes and 1,500 retweets within four months.

The data science community took notice next. On June 28, 2016, Gawker published an article speculating about who controlled Trump's phone, noting that a tweet ending with "sad" (no exclamation point) might have been written by a staffer imitating Trump's style. On August 9, 2016, data scientist David Robinson published a detailed analysis on his blog Variance Explained, using sentiment analysis to prove that Trump's Android tweets (his personal ones) were dramatically different from iPhone tweets (sent by campaign staff). Robinson found Trump's own tweets were about 40% more angry than those from the campaign, and that his personal tweets almost never used hashtags, links, or photos. The "Sad!" sign-off showed up exclusively in the Android tweets.

On August 18, 2016, NPR aired a segment interviewing several data scientists who had examined Trump's Twitter account. Professor David Lazer of Northeastern University noted Trump's heavy use of first-person pronouns and "adjective-noun combinations" like "Little Marco Rubio" and "low-energy Jeb Bush". His colleague Katherine Ognyanova specifically highlighted the "Sad!" ending as a trademark Trump move. NPR's Sam Sanders compared Trump's tweeting style to that of Kanye West, with data scientist Dave Robinson agreeing: "It's 100 percent clear that Trump doesn't tweet like a politician. He tweets like a celebrity".

How to Use This Meme

The "Sad!" format is simple to replicate:

1

State an opinion, criticism, or observation about someone or something.

2

End the message with the single word "Sad!" (exclamation point strongly recommended).

Cultural Impact

The "Sad!" tweets became a lens through which data scientists examined the broader shift in political communication. NPR framed Trump's Twitter presence as a tech breakthrough comparable to Howard Dean's online fundraising in 2004 and Barack Obama's grassroots organizing in 2008. Where previous candidates innovated with infrastructure, Trump's innovation was pure attention capture, 140 characters at a time.

Robinson's Variance Explained analysis became widely cited as one of the first rigorous text-mining studies applied to a sitting candidate's social media. His finding that Trump's Android tweets were systematically angrier than his iPhone tweets gave journalists a data-backed framework for distinguishing Trump's personal voice from his staff's. The Northeastern University team's research, led by David Lazer, further established that Trump's tweeting patterns, including the "Sad!" sign-off, represented a measurable departure from how any previous political candidate had used social media.

Hillary Clinton's April 2016 adoption of "Sad!" in her own tweet showed how quickly the format crossed from one politician's habit into a broader political vocabulary.

Fun Facts

Data scientist Dave Robinson discovered that Trump's personal tweets came from an Android phone while campaign tweets came from an iPhone, letting analysts sort Trump's voice from his staff's with near-perfect accuracy.

Trump's Android tweets used zero hashtags in almost all cases, while the campaign's iPhone tweets were full of them.

Robinson's sentiment analysis found Trump's personal tweets used 40-80% more words associated with disgust, sadness, fear, and anger compared to the campaign account.

A Gawker article once flagged a tweet ending with "sad" (no exclamation point) as possible evidence that a staffer was trying to imitate Trump's voice and didn't quite nail it.

When NPR asked Robinson which celebrity Trump's tweeting style most resembled, he said Kanye West.

Frequently Asked Questions

Donald Trumps Sad Tweets

2015Catchphrase / Twitter behaviorclassic

Also known as: Sad! · Trump "Sad!" · Trump's Sad Tweets

Donald Trump's Sad Tweets is a 2015 Twitter meme featuring the presidential candidate's signature habit of ending posts with the blunt, dismissive one-word sign-off "Sad!

Donald Trump's "Sad" Tweets refers to the 45th U.S. president's habit of ending Twitter posts with the word "Sad!" as a blunt, dismissive punctuation mark. The pattern picked up steam during his 2015-2016 presidential campaign and quickly became one of his most recognizable rhetorical tics online. Data scientists and media outlets studied the phenomenon extensively, turning a simple one-word sign-off into a widely parodied and imitated meme format.

TL;DR

Donald Trump's "Sad" Tweets refers to the 45th U.S.

Overview

During his 2016 presidential campaign and beyond, Donald Trump developed a distinctive Twitter habit: ending tweets with the single word "Sad!" (almost always with an exclamation point). The tweets typically followed a formula. Trump would criticize a person, organization, or media outlet, then cap the message with "Sad!" as a final, punchy verdict. The word functioned less as an expression of genuine sadness and more as a rhetorical weapon, a dismissive mic-drop meant to signal that whatever he was criticizing was beneath him.

The pattern was unmistakable enough that data scientists at Northeastern University identified it as a signature element of Trump's personal tweeting style, distinct from tweets posted by his campaign staff. Researcher Katherine Ognyanova called ending tweets with "sad!" a defining Trump move.

Trump's earliest notable use of "Sad!" as a tweet-ender came on June 19, 2015, just days after launching his presidential campaign. He tweeted that watching The Today Show host Brian Williams was "very sad!". The format was simple: observation or attack, followed by a one-word judgment.

By November 13, 2015, the pattern was clearly established. Trump posted a tweet criticizing Republican primary rival Carly Fiorina for making "false statements" about him, ending the message with "sad". What started as an occasional flourish became a reliable formula throughout the campaign.

Origin & Background

Platform
Twitter (source behavior), Media coverage (viral spread)
Creator
Donald Trump
Date
2015
Year
2015

Trump's earliest notable use of "Sad!" as a tweet-ender came on June 19, 2015, just days after launching his presidential campaign. He tweeted that watching The Today Show host Brian Williams was "very sad!". The format was simple: observation or attack, followed by a one-word judgment.

By November 13, 2015, the pattern was clearly established. Trump posted a tweet criticizing Republican primary rival Carly Fiorina for making "false statements" about him, ending the message with "sad". What started as an occasional flourish became a reliable formula throughout the campaign.

How It Spread

Media attention turned Trump's "Sad!" habit from a quirky tic into a documented cultural artifact. On January 22, 2016, Slate published a post collecting nine Trump tweets that ended with "sad!". Six weeks later, on March 3, The Washington Post ran a listicle titled "47 Things That Have Made Donald Trump 'Sad' Since He Launched His Campaign," cataloging the sheer range of targets Trump had labeled with the word.

On March 20, 2016, a Quora user submitted the question "Why does Trump use 'Sad!' so much in his tweets?", showing the habit had entered public curiosity. Then on April 23, 2016, Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton flipped the script, posting a tweet about Trump that ended with "Sad!" The tweet picked up over 2,700 likes and 1,500 retweets within four months.

The data science community took notice next. On June 28, 2016, Gawker published an article speculating about who controlled Trump's phone, noting that a tweet ending with "sad" (no exclamation point) might have been written by a staffer imitating Trump's style. On August 9, 2016, data scientist David Robinson published a detailed analysis on his blog Variance Explained, using sentiment analysis to prove that Trump's Android tweets (his personal ones) were dramatically different from iPhone tweets (sent by campaign staff). Robinson found Trump's own tweets were about 40% more angry than those from the campaign, and that his personal tweets almost never used hashtags, links, or photos. The "Sad!" sign-off showed up exclusively in the Android tweets.

On August 18, 2016, NPR aired a segment interviewing several data scientists who had examined Trump's Twitter account. Professor David Lazer of Northeastern University noted Trump's heavy use of first-person pronouns and "adjective-noun combinations" like "Little Marco Rubio" and "low-energy Jeb Bush". His colleague Katherine Ognyanova specifically highlighted the "Sad!" ending as a trademark Trump move. NPR's Sam Sanders compared Trump's tweeting style to that of Kanye West, with data scientist Dave Robinson agreeing: "It's 100 percent clear that Trump doesn't tweet like a politician. He tweets like a celebrity".

How to Use This Meme

The "Sad!" format is simple to replicate:

1

State an opinion, criticism, or observation about someone or something.

2

End the message with the single word "Sad!" (exclamation point strongly recommended).

Cultural Impact

The "Sad!" tweets became a lens through which data scientists examined the broader shift in political communication. NPR framed Trump's Twitter presence as a tech breakthrough comparable to Howard Dean's online fundraising in 2004 and Barack Obama's grassroots organizing in 2008. Where previous candidates innovated with infrastructure, Trump's innovation was pure attention capture, 140 characters at a time.

Robinson's Variance Explained analysis became widely cited as one of the first rigorous text-mining studies applied to a sitting candidate's social media. His finding that Trump's Android tweets were systematically angrier than his iPhone tweets gave journalists a data-backed framework for distinguishing Trump's personal voice from his staff's. The Northeastern University team's research, led by David Lazer, further established that Trump's tweeting patterns, including the "Sad!" sign-off, represented a measurable departure from how any previous political candidate had used social media.

Hillary Clinton's April 2016 adoption of "Sad!" in her own tweet showed how quickly the format crossed from one politician's habit into a broader political vocabulary.

Fun Facts

Data scientist Dave Robinson discovered that Trump's personal tweets came from an Android phone while campaign tweets came from an iPhone, letting analysts sort Trump's voice from his staff's with near-perfect accuracy.

Trump's Android tweets used zero hashtags in almost all cases, while the campaign's iPhone tweets were full of them.

Robinson's sentiment analysis found Trump's personal tweets used 40-80% more words associated with disgust, sadness, fear, and anger compared to the campaign account.

A Gawker article once flagged a tweet ending with "sad" (no exclamation point) as possible evidence that a staffer was trying to imitate Trump's voice and didn't quite nail it.

When NPR asked Robinson which celebrity Trump's tweeting style most resembled, he said Kanye West.

Frequently Asked Questions