Elon Musk Kubrick Stare

2024Reaction image / exploitable photosemi-active

Also known as: Elon Musk Handshake Stare · Musk MAGA Stare

Elon Musk Kubrick Stare is a 2024 reaction image of Elon Musk at a Trump rally, featuring an upward gaze and tilted head evoking the unsettling cinematography technique of Stanley Kubrick's films.

Elon Musk Kubrick Stare is a meme based on a photograph of Elon Musk shaking Donald Trump's hand at a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania on October 5, 2024, where Musk's upward gaze and tilted head drew immediate comparisons to the famous "Kubrick Stare" shot from Stanley Kubrick films4. The unflattering image spread rapidly across X, Threads, and other platforms as users mocked Musk's expression, calling it creepy, villainous, and unhinged4. It became one of several viral moments from the same rally, alongside the widely shared video of Musk awkwardly jumping on stage1.

TL;DR

Elon Musk Kubrick Stare is a meme based on a photograph of Elon Musk shaking Donald Trump's hand at a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania on October 5, 2024, where Musk's upward gaze and tilted head drew immediate comparisons to the famous "Kubrick Stare" shot from Stanley Kubrick films.

Overview

The meme centers on a press photograph showing Musk gripping Trump's hand while looking upward at the former president with his head tilted forward and eyes peering from beneath his brow4. Musk wore a black "Make America Great Again" hat in the shot1. The angle and expression bore a strong resemblance to the "Kubrick Stare," a signature cinematographic technique named after director Stanley Kubrick, who famously directed actors like Jack Nicholson in *The Shining* to convey derangement by glaring at the camera with a forward head tilt4. The image struck viewers as deeply unflattering, with many reading menace, obsession, or unhinged devotion into Musk's face2.

On October 5, 2024, Donald Trump held a rally at the Butler Farm Show grounds in Butler, Pennsylvania, his first return to the site where he survived an assassination attempt on July 13, 20243. During the event, Trump introduced Musk as a "truly incredible guy" who "saved free speech," and Musk took the stage wearing his black MAGA hat, declaring "I'm not just MAGA, I'm dark MAGA"1.

At one point, Musk shook Trump's hand while staring upward at him. Getty Images photographer Jim Watson captured the moment in a photo that immediately stood out for Musk's intense, unsettling expression4. Additional angles of the handshake were shot by other photographers, including one published by CBS News that same day3.

Later on October 5, X user @jessehawken posted the Watson photograph with the caption "I found an even worse photo than the jumping one," referencing a separate viral clip of Musk hopping around on stage4. The tweet pulled in over 127,000 likes within two days4.

Origin & Background

Platform
Getty Images (source photo), X / Twitter (viral spread)
Key People
Jim Watson, @jessehawken
Date
2024
Year
2024

On October 5, 2024, Donald Trump held a rally at the Butler Farm Show grounds in Butler, Pennsylvania, his first return to the site where he survived an assassination attempt on July 13, 2024. During the event, Trump introduced Musk as a "truly incredible guy" who "saved free speech," and Musk took the stage wearing his black MAGA hat, declaring "I'm not just MAGA, I'm dark MAGA".

At one point, Musk shook Trump's hand while staring upward at him. Getty Images photographer Jim Watson captured the moment in a photo that immediately stood out for Musk's intense, unsettling expression. Additional angles of the handshake were shot by other photographers, including one published by CBS News that same day.

Later on October 5, X user @jessehawken posted the Watson photograph with the caption "I found an even worse photo than the jumping one," referencing a separate viral clip of Musk hopping around on stage. The tweet pulled in over 127,000 likes within two days.

How It Spread

The image moved fast across social media in the following hours and days. On October 5, X user @nise_yoshimi posted a cropped version showing only Musk's face and compared his look to a "Chief Eunuch," earning roughly 42,000 likes in two days.

By October 6, users had cropped the photo even tighter. X user @InsaneMistress isolated just Musk's head and explicitly named the expression as a "Kubrick Stare," picking up around 12,000 likes in a single day. The Kubrick comparison stuck, giving the meme its name and framing how people interpreted the image.

The meme also crossed over to Threads on October 6, where user @godless_mom shared a screenshot of a tweet calling Musk and Trump "comic book villains," collecting over 1,400 likes in a day. Meme creators used the image as both a standalone reaction photo and as a template for broader commentary about Musk's political alignment with Trump.

The rally itself produced multiple viral moments. Musk's awkward jumping entrance got wide coverage from outlets like New York Magazine, which described him as "trying to become a human MAGA meme". CBS News ran extensive photo galleries from the event, which featured bullet-resistant glass around Trump and heavy security presence given the assassination attempt three months earlier. The Kubrick Stare image became the darker counterpart to the jumping clip, with the jump reading as goofy and the stare reading as sinister.

Musk changed his X profile picture to one of himself in the black MAGA hat after the rally, which only amplified the meme's reach as more users encountered the comparison between Musk's curated self-image and the unflattering press photo.

How to Use This Meme

The Elon Musk Kubrick Stare typically works in a few ways:

1

As a reaction image: Post the cropped photo of Musk's face (head tilted, eyes peering upward) in response to someone doing something creepy, obsessive, or wildly overcommitted. Works for "when you go way too hard for someone who doesn't care about you" energy.

2

As a comparison template: Place Musk's stare next to other Kubrick Stare examples (Jack Nicholson in *The Shining*, Malcolm McDowell in *A Clockwork Orange*) to draw the villain parallel.

3

As political commentary: Use the image to comment on Musk's relationship with Trump, tech billionaires in politics, or sycophantic behavior in general. Often paired with captions about loyalty, servitude, or supervillainy.

4

As an exploitable: Meme generators like memeOS offer the image as a captionable template where users add their own top and bottom text to match scenarios involving "radical changes, high-stakes tech gambles, or moments of sheer, unblinking determination".

Cultural Impact

The photo arrived at a charged political moment. Musk had endorsed Trump following the July assassination attempt and was backing a PAC that the Trump campaign had outsourced its swing-state ground operations to. His rally appearance was part of an escalating public alliance that included hosting Trump on X for an interview and regularly amplifying pro-Trump content on the platform.

New York Magazine's coverage of the rally noted that Musk "echoed the same hyperbolic rhetoric that has long been standard at Trump rallies," including warnings that the 2024 race would be "the last election" if Trump lost. The Kubrick Stare image captured what many critics saw as the visual thesis of that alliance: a tech billionaire staring up at a political figure with an expression that read as devotion, madness, or both.

The meme also fed into a broader pattern of unflattering Musk photos becoming viral content. The "Elon Musk Jumping" video from the same rally day provided a comic counterpart, while the Kubrick Stare offered the darker reading. Together, the two images defined how the October 5 rally was remembered online.

Fun Facts

The original viral tweet by @jessehawken explicitly referenced the jumping photo, calling the Kubrick Stare shot "an even worse photo than the jumping one".

The "Kubrick Stare" technique gets its name from Stanley Kubrick's recurring use of a low-angle, head-tilted-forward shot to signal psychological instability in characters, most famously Jack Nicholson's Jack Torrance in *The Shining*.

Musk's self-described "dark MAGA" identity at the rally, referencing his black hat, inadvertently gave the stare photo extra meme fuel as users connected "dark MAGA" to his villainous expression.

The Butler rally was notable for its heavy security, with Trump speaking from behind bullet-resistant glass for the first time since the July assassination attempt.

Frequently Asked Questions

Elon Musk Kubrick Stare

2024Reaction image / exploitable photosemi-active

Also known as: Elon Musk Handshake Stare · Musk MAGA Stare

Elon Musk Kubrick Stare is a 2024 reaction image of Elon Musk at a Trump rally, featuring an upward gaze and tilted head evoking the unsettling cinematography technique of Stanley Kubrick's films.

Elon Musk Kubrick Stare is a meme based on a photograph of Elon Musk shaking Donald Trump's hand at a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania on October 5, 2024, where Musk's upward gaze and tilted head drew immediate comparisons to the famous "Kubrick Stare" shot from Stanley Kubrick films. The unflattering image spread rapidly across X, Threads, and other platforms as users mocked Musk's expression, calling it creepy, villainous, and unhinged. It became one of several viral moments from the same rally, alongside the widely shared video of Musk awkwardly jumping on stage.

TL;DR

Elon Musk Kubrick Stare is a meme based on a photograph of Elon Musk shaking Donald Trump's hand at a rally in Butler, Pennsylvania on October 5, 2024, where Musk's upward gaze and tilted head drew immediate comparisons to the famous "Kubrick Stare" shot from Stanley Kubrick films.

Overview

The meme centers on a press photograph showing Musk gripping Trump's hand while looking upward at the former president with his head tilted forward and eyes peering from beneath his brow. Musk wore a black "Make America Great Again" hat in the shot. The angle and expression bore a strong resemblance to the "Kubrick Stare," a signature cinematographic technique named after director Stanley Kubrick, who famously directed actors like Jack Nicholson in *The Shining* to convey derangement by glaring at the camera with a forward head tilt. The image struck viewers as deeply unflattering, with many reading menace, obsession, or unhinged devotion into Musk's face.

On October 5, 2024, Donald Trump held a rally at the Butler Farm Show grounds in Butler, Pennsylvania, his first return to the site where he survived an assassination attempt on July 13, 2024. During the event, Trump introduced Musk as a "truly incredible guy" who "saved free speech," and Musk took the stage wearing his black MAGA hat, declaring "I'm not just MAGA, I'm dark MAGA".

At one point, Musk shook Trump's hand while staring upward at him. Getty Images photographer Jim Watson captured the moment in a photo that immediately stood out for Musk's intense, unsettling expression. Additional angles of the handshake were shot by other photographers, including one published by CBS News that same day.

Later on October 5, X user @jessehawken posted the Watson photograph with the caption "I found an even worse photo than the jumping one," referencing a separate viral clip of Musk hopping around on stage. The tweet pulled in over 127,000 likes within two days.

Origin & Background

Platform
Getty Images (source photo), X / Twitter (viral spread)
Key People
Jim Watson, @jessehawken
Date
2024
Year
2024

On October 5, 2024, Donald Trump held a rally at the Butler Farm Show grounds in Butler, Pennsylvania, his first return to the site where he survived an assassination attempt on July 13, 2024. During the event, Trump introduced Musk as a "truly incredible guy" who "saved free speech," and Musk took the stage wearing his black MAGA hat, declaring "I'm not just MAGA, I'm dark MAGA".

At one point, Musk shook Trump's hand while staring upward at him. Getty Images photographer Jim Watson captured the moment in a photo that immediately stood out for Musk's intense, unsettling expression. Additional angles of the handshake were shot by other photographers, including one published by CBS News that same day.

Later on October 5, X user @jessehawken posted the Watson photograph with the caption "I found an even worse photo than the jumping one," referencing a separate viral clip of Musk hopping around on stage. The tweet pulled in over 127,000 likes within two days.

How It Spread

The image moved fast across social media in the following hours and days. On October 5, X user @nise_yoshimi posted a cropped version showing only Musk's face and compared his look to a "Chief Eunuch," earning roughly 42,000 likes in two days.

By October 6, users had cropped the photo even tighter. X user @InsaneMistress isolated just Musk's head and explicitly named the expression as a "Kubrick Stare," picking up around 12,000 likes in a single day. The Kubrick comparison stuck, giving the meme its name and framing how people interpreted the image.

The meme also crossed over to Threads on October 6, where user @godless_mom shared a screenshot of a tweet calling Musk and Trump "comic book villains," collecting over 1,400 likes in a day. Meme creators used the image as both a standalone reaction photo and as a template for broader commentary about Musk's political alignment with Trump.

The rally itself produced multiple viral moments. Musk's awkward jumping entrance got wide coverage from outlets like New York Magazine, which described him as "trying to become a human MAGA meme". CBS News ran extensive photo galleries from the event, which featured bullet-resistant glass around Trump and heavy security presence given the assassination attempt three months earlier. The Kubrick Stare image became the darker counterpart to the jumping clip, with the jump reading as goofy and the stare reading as sinister.

Musk changed his X profile picture to one of himself in the black MAGA hat after the rally, which only amplified the meme's reach as more users encountered the comparison between Musk's curated self-image and the unflattering press photo.

How to Use This Meme

The Elon Musk Kubrick Stare typically works in a few ways:

1

As a reaction image: Post the cropped photo of Musk's face (head tilted, eyes peering upward) in response to someone doing something creepy, obsessive, or wildly overcommitted. Works for "when you go way too hard for someone who doesn't care about you" energy.

2

As a comparison template: Place Musk's stare next to other Kubrick Stare examples (Jack Nicholson in *The Shining*, Malcolm McDowell in *A Clockwork Orange*) to draw the villain parallel.

3

As political commentary: Use the image to comment on Musk's relationship with Trump, tech billionaires in politics, or sycophantic behavior in general. Often paired with captions about loyalty, servitude, or supervillainy.

4

As an exploitable: Meme generators like memeOS offer the image as a captionable template where users add their own top and bottom text to match scenarios involving "radical changes, high-stakes tech gambles, or moments of sheer, unblinking determination".

Cultural Impact

The photo arrived at a charged political moment. Musk had endorsed Trump following the July assassination attempt and was backing a PAC that the Trump campaign had outsourced its swing-state ground operations to. His rally appearance was part of an escalating public alliance that included hosting Trump on X for an interview and regularly amplifying pro-Trump content on the platform.

New York Magazine's coverage of the rally noted that Musk "echoed the same hyperbolic rhetoric that has long been standard at Trump rallies," including warnings that the 2024 race would be "the last election" if Trump lost. The Kubrick Stare image captured what many critics saw as the visual thesis of that alliance: a tech billionaire staring up at a political figure with an expression that read as devotion, madness, or both.

The meme also fed into a broader pattern of unflattering Musk photos becoming viral content. The "Elon Musk Jumping" video from the same rally day provided a comic counterpart, while the Kubrick Stare offered the darker reading. Together, the two images defined how the October 5 rally was remembered online.

Fun Facts

The original viral tweet by @jessehawken explicitly referenced the jumping photo, calling the Kubrick Stare shot "an even worse photo than the jumping one".

The "Kubrick Stare" technique gets its name from Stanley Kubrick's recurring use of a low-angle, head-tilted-forward shot to signal psychological instability in characters, most famously Jack Nicholson's Jack Torrance in *The Shining*.

Musk's self-described "dark MAGA" identity at the rally, referencing his black hat, inadvertently gave the stare photo extra meme fuel as users connected "dark MAGA" to his villainous expression.

The Butler rally was notable for its heavy security, with Trump speaking from behind bullet-resistant glass for the first time since the July assassination attempt.

Frequently Asked Questions