President Trumps 2018 United Nations General Assembly Speech Reaction

2018Reaction image / image macro / viral video clipsemi-active

Also known as: "Didn't Expect That Reaction · " Trump UN Laugh · UN Laughing at Trump

President Trump's 2018 UN General Assembly Speech Reaction is a viral image macro capturing world leaders' audible laughter at Trump's boast of unprecedented presidential accomplishment.

"President Trump's 2018 United Nations General Assembly Speech Reaction" is a meme born from the moment world leaders laughed at Donald Trump during his September 25, 2018 address to the UN General Assembly. After Trump declared his administration "has accomplished more than almost any administration in the history of our country," audible laughter spread through the chamber, prompting Trump to respond, "Didn't expect that reaction, but that's OK"1. The clip and Trump's deadpan recovery quickly became an image macro template and a go-to reaction format across Twitter and Reddit.

TL;DR

"President Trump's 2018 United Nations General Assembly Speech Reaction" is a meme born from the moment world leaders laughed at Donald Trump during his September 25, 2018 address to the UN General Assembly.

Overview

The meme centers on a specific exchange during Trump's 2018 UN General Assembly speech. When Trump opened with a boast about his administration's historic accomplishments, the assembled world leaders and diplomats broke into open laughter. Trump paused, acknowledged the unexpected response with his now-famous line, and pressed forward with his speech. The moment was captured on the official UN broadcast and quickly clipped for social media.

The image macro version typically uses a still of Trump at the UN podium paired with the quote "Didn't expect that reaction, but that's OK." It's deployed as a reaction when something gets an unexpectedly funny or embarrassing response, particularly when someone's bragging backfires.

On September 25, 2018, President Trump delivered his second address to the United Nations General Assembly in New York1. He opened in campaign-rally style, declaring, "In less than two years, my administration has accomplished almost more than any other administration in the history of our country"3. A slow rumble of laughter rolled through the chamber3.

Trump paused and responded, "Didn't expect that reaction, but that's OK," drawing even more laughter1. Unlike his 2017 speech, which was met with outrage over his threat to "totally destroy North Korea," the 2018 address triggered something rarer in diplomatic settings: open mockery3.

The full speech covered Iran sanctions, the China trade war, and North Korea diplomacy, but the opening gaffe overshadowed all of it1. Bolton and Stephen Miller had co-written the address with its heavy "sovereignty" theme, but the braggadocious intro was pure Trump rally energy dropped into a room full of diplomats who did not share the enthusiasm2.

Origin & Background

Platform
C-SPAN / UN livestream (source video), Twitter / Reddit (meme format)
Creator
Unknown
Date
2018
Year
2018

On September 25, 2018, President Trump delivered his second address to the United Nations General Assembly in New York. He opened in campaign-rally style, declaring, "In less than two years, my administration has accomplished almost more than any other administration in the history of our country". A slow rumble of laughter rolled through the chamber.

Trump paused and responded, "Didn't expect that reaction, but that's OK," drawing even more laughter. Unlike his 2017 speech, which was met with outrage over his threat to "totally destroy North Korea," the 2018 address triggered something rarer in diplomatic settings: open mockery.

The full speech covered Iran sanctions, the China trade war, and North Korea diplomacy, but the opening gaffe overshadowed all of it. Bolton and Stephen Miller had co-written the address with its heavy "sovereignty" theme, but the braggadocious intro was pure Trump rally energy dropped into a room full of diplomats who did not share the enthusiasm.

How It Spread

Within hours of the speech, the clip was everywhere on Twitter. User @DefenseBaron tweeted a play-by-play noting that "the entire UN general assembly LAUGHS OUT LOUD at the president of the United States," pulling in over 3,500 retweets and 11,900 likes within 24 hours.

Senator Tim Kaine retweeted an old Trump post that read, "We need a President who isn't a laughing stock to the entire World. We need a truly great leader, a genius at strategy and winning. Respect!" Kaine simply added, "I agree." The retweet pulled more than 11,000 retweets and 63,000 likes in a day.

By September 26, the still image of Trump at the podium had been turned into an image macro on Reddit. User we-meme-in-a-society posted it to r/all with the caption about a low-effort meme reaching the front page, earning over 7,000 upvotes. The format caught on quickly: pair the Trump UN image with any scenario where overconfidence meets reality.

Diplomats themselves piled on. One Latin American diplomat told BuzzFeed News it was "not laughing at a good joke, but a nervous laugh, or a bad joke turned laughable precisely because the guy who tells the joke doesn't realize how bad it is". A European diplomat described the opening as "bragging ridiculously" in a way that might work at a rally but "sounded a little awkward at the UN General Assembly".

The German delegation was also caught smirking on camera when Trump warned that "Germany will become totally dependent on Russian energy". One diplomat in the room said everyone was "trying not to roll their eyes".

Trump pushed back the following day at a press conference, insisting, "They weren't laughing at me, they were laughing with me. We had fun". US Ambassador Nikki Haley backed him up on Fox News, claiming the audience "loved his honesty". But the diplomat quotes told a different story.

Major outlets including CNN, CBS, BuzzFeed News, and The Daily Dot ran extensive coverage of both the incident and the meme response.

How to Use This Meme

The "Didn't Expect That Reaction" format typically works in two ways:

As a reaction image: Post the Trump podium still (or the video clip) in response to someone whose boast or confident statement gets an unexpectedly negative or mocking response. Works well for situations where self-awareness is clearly lacking.

As an image macro: Take the still of Trump at the UN, add top text describing an overconfident claim or action, and use his quote as the bottom text punchline. The humor comes from mapping his genuine surprise onto relatable situations where bragging goes wrong.

Common setups include posting a bad take and getting ratio'd, sharing work you're proud of only to get roasted, or any moment where someone's confidence wildly exceeds the audience's reception.

Cultural Impact

The incident was unusual in UN history. World leaders don't typically laugh at a sitting US president during a formal General Assembly address. Richard Gowan, a senior fellow at United Nations University, told BuzzFeed News that "world leaders have worked out that trying to reason with Trump does not work. Trying to attack him often backfires. But laughing at him can defuse his attacks".

Jeff Rathke of the American Institute for Contemporary German Studies at Johns Hopkins pointed out that Trump's shock tactics had diminishing returns in diplomatic settings: "When one of your principal techniques in conducting international politics is to shock, the currency of shocking gets debased". The laughter was partly a product of that desensitization.

The clip also became political ammunition. The irony of Trump's earlier tweet calling for a president who isn't "a laughing stock to the entire World" getting resurfaced and going viral was not lost on anyone. It was one of the more direct examples of a politician's own words being weaponized as a meme against them in real time.

CBS News noted that Trump's 2017 speech drew outrage while his 2018 speech drew laughter, marking a shift in how the international community processed his rhetoric.

Fun Facts

Trump's speech was not once interrupted by applause, a break from the reception typically given to US presidents at the UNGA.

The speech was co-written by John Bolton and Stephen Miller, both known for their hawkish and nationalist stances.

Trump conspicuously avoided criticizing Russia in the speech, despite years of Western criticism of Moscow's actions.

His 2017 UN speech threatened to "totally destroy North Korea" and coined the "Rocket Man" nickname for Kim Jong Un. By 2018, he was thanking Kim "for his courage".

The "totally dependent on Russian energy" claim about Germany was a stretch. Natural gas made up about 25 percent of Germany's energy consumption at the time.

Derivatives & Variations

"Didn't expect that reaction" caption format:

A general-purpose reaction image applied to any backfired flex or roast, used widely on Reddit and Twitter through late 2018 and into 2019[4].

Tim Kaine's retweet format:

The juxtaposition of Trump's old "laughing stock" tweet with the UN incident became its own mini-meme, shared as a standalone screenshot across platforms[4].

German delegation smirk:

Screenshots of the German diplomats laughing during Trump's energy independence warning to Germany circulated as a separate reaction image[2].

Frequently Asked Questions

President Trumps 2018 United Nations General Assembly Speech Reaction

2018Reaction image / image macro / viral video clipsemi-active

Also known as: "Didn't Expect That Reaction · " Trump UN Laugh · UN Laughing at Trump

President Trump's 2018 UN General Assembly Speech Reaction is a viral image macro capturing world leaders' audible laughter at Trump's boast of unprecedented presidential accomplishment.

"President Trump's 2018 United Nations General Assembly Speech Reaction" is a meme born from the moment world leaders laughed at Donald Trump during his September 25, 2018 address to the UN General Assembly. After Trump declared his administration "has accomplished more than almost any administration in the history of our country," audible laughter spread through the chamber, prompting Trump to respond, "Didn't expect that reaction, but that's OK". The clip and Trump's deadpan recovery quickly became an image macro template and a go-to reaction format across Twitter and Reddit.

TL;DR

"President Trump's 2018 United Nations General Assembly Speech Reaction" is a meme born from the moment world leaders laughed at Donald Trump during his September 25, 2018 address to the UN General Assembly.

Overview

The meme centers on a specific exchange during Trump's 2018 UN General Assembly speech. When Trump opened with a boast about his administration's historic accomplishments, the assembled world leaders and diplomats broke into open laughter. Trump paused, acknowledged the unexpected response with his now-famous line, and pressed forward with his speech. The moment was captured on the official UN broadcast and quickly clipped for social media.

The image macro version typically uses a still of Trump at the UN podium paired with the quote "Didn't expect that reaction, but that's OK." It's deployed as a reaction when something gets an unexpectedly funny or embarrassing response, particularly when someone's bragging backfires.

On September 25, 2018, President Trump delivered his second address to the United Nations General Assembly in New York. He opened in campaign-rally style, declaring, "In less than two years, my administration has accomplished almost more than any other administration in the history of our country". A slow rumble of laughter rolled through the chamber.

Trump paused and responded, "Didn't expect that reaction, but that's OK," drawing even more laughter. Unlike his 2017 speech, which was met with outrage over his threat to "totally destroy North Korea," the 2018 address triggered something rarer in diplomatic settings: open mockery.

The full speech covered Iran sanctions, the China trade war, and North Korea diplomacy, but the opening gaffe overshadowed all of it. Bolton and Stephen Miller had co-written the address with its heavy "sovereignty" theme, but the braggadocious intro was pure Trump rally energy dropped into a room full of diplomats who did not share the enthusiasm.

Origin & Background

Platform
C-SPAN / UN livestream (source video), Twitter / Reddit (meme format)
Creator
Unknown
Date
2018
Year
2018

On September 25, 2018, President Trump delivered his second address to the United Nations General Assembly in New York. He opened in campaign-rally style, declaring, "In less than two years, my administration has accomplished almost more than any other administration in the history of our country". A slow rumble of laughter rolled through the chamber.

Trump paused and responded, "Didn't expect that reaction, but that's OK," drawing even more laughter. Unlike his 2017 speech, which was met with outrage over his threat to "totally destroy North Korea," the 2018 address triggered something rarer in diplomatic settings: open mockery.

The full speech covered Iran sanctions, the China trade war, and North Korea diplomacy, but the opening gaffe overshadowed all of it. Bolton and Stephen Miller had co-written the address with its heavy "sovereignty" theme, but the braggadocious intro was pure Trump rally energy dropped into a room full of diplomats who did not share the enthusiasm.

How It Spread

Within hours of the speech, the clip was everywhere on Twitter. User @DefenseBaron tweeted a play-by-play noting that "the entire UN general assembly LAUGHS OUT LOUD at the president of the United States," pulling in over 3,500 retweets and 11,900 likes within 24 hours.

Senator Tim Kaine retweeted an old Trump post that read, "We need a President who isn't a laughing stock to the entire World. We need a truly great leader, a genius at strategy and winning. Respect!" Kaine simply added, "I agree." The retweet pulled more than 11,000 retweets and 63,000 likes in a day.

By September 26, the still image of Trump at the podium had been turned into an image macro on Reddit. User we-meme-in-a-society posted it to r/all with the caption about a low-effort meme reaching the front page, earning over 7,000 upvotes. The format caught on quickly: pair the Trump UN image with any scenario where overconfidence meets reality.

Diplomats themselves piled on. One Latin American diplomat told BuzzFeed News it was "not laughing at a good joke, but a nervous laugh, or a bad joke turned laughable precisely because the guy who tells the joke doesn't realize how bad it is". A European diplomat described the opening as "bragging ridiculously" in a way that might work at a rally but "sounded a little awkward at the UN General Assembly".

The German delegation was also caught smirking on camera when Trump warned that "Germany will become totally dependent on Russian energy". One diplomat in the room said everyone was "trying not to roll their eyes".

Trump pushed back the following day at a press conference, insisting, "They weren't laughing at me, they were laughing with me. We had fun". US Ambassador Nikki Haley backed him up on Fox News, claiming the audience "loved his honesty". But the diplomat quotes told a different story.

Major outlets including CNN, CBS, BuzzFeed News, and The Daily Dot ran extensive coverage of both the incident and the meme response.

How to Use This Meme

The "Didn't Expect That Reaction" format typically works in two ways:

As a reaction image: Post the Trump podium still (or the video clip) in response to someone whose boast or confident statement gets an unexpectedly negative or mocking response. Works well for situations where self-awareness is clearly lacking.

As an image macro: Take the still of Trump at the UN, add top text describing an overconfident claim or action, and use his quote as the bottom text punchline. The humor comes from mapping his genuine surprise onto relatable situations where bragging goes wrong.

Common setups include posting a bad take and getting ratio'd, sharing work you're proud of only to get roasted, or any moment where someone's confidence wildly exceeds the audience's reception.

Cultural Impact

The incident was unusual in UN history. World leaders don't typically laugh at a sitting US president during a formal General Assembly address. Richard Gowan, a senior fellow at United Nations University, told BuzzFeed News that "world leaders have worked out that trying to reason with Trump does not work. Trying to attack him often backfires. But laughing at him can defuse his attacks".

Jeff Rathke of the American Institute for Contemporary German Studies at Johns Hopkins pointed out that Trump's shock tactics had diminishing returns in diplomatic settings: "When one of your principal techniques in conducting international politics is to shock, the currency of shocking gets debased". The laughter was partly a product of that desensitization.

The clip also became political ammunition. The irony of Trump's earlier tweet calling for a president who isn't "a laughing stock to the entire World" getting resurfaced and going viral was not lost on anyone. It was one of the more direct examples of a politician's own words being weaponized as a meme against them in real time.

CBS News noted that Trump's 2017 speech drew outrage while his 2018 speech drew laughter, marking a shift in how the international community processed his rhetoric.

Fun Facts

Trump's speech was not once interrupted by applause, a break from the reception typically given to US presidents at the UNGA.

The speech was co-written by John Bolton and Stephen Miller, both known for their hawkish and nationalist stances.

Trump conspicuously avoided criticizing Russia in the speech, despite years of Western criticism of Moscow's actions.

His 2017 UN speech threatened to "totally destroy North Korea" and coined the "Rocket Man" nickname for Kim Jong Un. By 2018, he was thanking Kim "for his courage".

The "totally dependent on Russian energy" claim about Germany was a stretch. Natural gas made up about 25 percent of Germany's energy consumption at the time.

Derivatives & Variations

"Didn't expect that reaction" caption format:

A general-purpose reaction image applied to any backfired flex or roast, used widely on Reddit and Twitter through late 2018 and into 2019[4].

Tim Kaine's retweet format:

The juxtaposition of Trump's old "laughing stock" tweet with the UN incident became its own mini-meme, shared as a standalone screenshot across platforms[4].

German delegation smirk:

Screenshots of the German diplomats laughing during Trump's energy independence warning to Germany circulated as a separate reaction image[2].

Frequently Asked Questions