Trump Lurking Behind Clinton
Also known as: Trump Stalking Clinton · Debate Lurking
Trump Lurking Behind Clinton refers to photographs and video clips from the second 2016 U.S. presidential debate showing Donald Trump standing and pacing behind Hillary Clinton while she spoke. The moment, captured on October 9, 2016, spawned a wave of memes comparing the scene to horror movie imagery, with viewers on Twitter describing Trump's body language as "stalking" and "looming"1. The Clinton campaign itself called the behavior "menacingly stalking," and the images became one of the most talked-about visuals of the entire 2016 election cycle2.
TL;DR
Trump Lurking Behind Clinton refers to photographs and video clips from the second 2016 U.S.
Overview
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
The meme typically takes one of a few forms:
- Screen captures from the debate showing Trump standing behind Clinton, often captioned with horror movie references or jokes about personal space - Photoshop edits placing Trump's lurking figure into horror movie posters, particularly *It Follows* and *Jaws* - Reaction images used when someone is hovering, looming, or being watched from behind in any context - Supercut videos compiling Trump's pacing and lurking moments, often set to ominous music
The format works best when applied to situations involving someone obliviously being watched or followed, or when commenting on awkward power dynamics and personal space violations.
Cultural Impact
Fun Facts
Nigel Farage, while trying to defend Trump's debate performance, accidentally created one of the night's best quotes by comparing him to "a big silverback gorilla, prowling the studio"
The candidates broke with protocol by not shaking hands at the start of the debate, setting a tense tone from the very beginning
Vox's analysis noted that sometimes Trump's body slid into frame "without his head accompanying it," making the visual even more unsettling
Clinton waited three years before publicly addressing the moment, finally calling it an "alpha male impersonation" on late-night television in 2019
The Denver Post assigned a *dance critic* to analyze the candidates' body language, framing the debate as a physical performance
Derivatives & Variations
*It Follows* poster edit
— A photoshopped version of the 2014 horror film's poster with Trump lurking behind Clinton, posted by Twitter user @darth on debate night[4]
*Jaws* supercut
— HuffPost's compilation of Trump's lurking moments set to the *Jaws* theme song, released October 10, 2016[3]
Fitbit jokes
— A subset of tweets joking that Trump was pacing to hit his step count goal during the debate[1]
"He's behind me, isn't he?" captions
— A popular format referencing the classic horror/comedy trope, applied to screenshots of Clinton speaking with Trump visible over her shoulder[3]
Frequently Asked Questions
References (11)
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4Trump Lurking Behind Clinton - Know Your Memeencyclopedia
- 5Donald Trump 2016 presidential campaignencyclopedia
- 6
- 7
- 8
- 9
- 10
- 11