On October 13, The New York Times reported that a video depicting President Donald Trump murdering political opponents and members of the press had been shown at a conference for his supporters held the previous week at the Trump National Doral Miami. The video was a doctored version of a scene in the 2014 movie Kingsman: The Secret Service, in which a British spy, played by Colin Firth, is brainwashed into murdering congregants in a Kentucky church.
Part of a “meme exhibit,” according to the event’s organizers, the video showed Trump’s face superimposed over Firth’s, while his victims’ faces were covered with those of Democratic politicians or the logos of media outlets viewed as critical of Trump and his policies. One murder victim was labeled “Black Lives Matter.” The church in which the grisly slaying takes place was retitled the “Church of Fake News.”
The video was quickly traced to a pseudonymous pro-Trump meme maker who goes by “TheGeekzTeam” and is listed as a contributor to the website MemeWorld. MemeWorld was founded in August by Logan Cook, a prolific pro-Trump social media personality with more than 188,000 Twitter followers who also goes by the online name Carpe Donktum. In an August 20 tweet, he billed MemeWorld as “a collaboration of some of the greatest meme minds on Planet Earth!!”
In reality, MemeWorld is brimming with content that appears to promote political violence, conspiracy theories, racism, misogyny, and anti-Semitism. It also does not hesitate to accept content from, or promote the work of, high-profile extremist figures. And its founder clearly has the attention of President Trump, who invited Cook to the White House in July for a “social media summit” alongside other far-right social media personalities.
TheGeekzTeam’s video was swiftly condemned by CNN, which issued a statement decrying it as “vile and horrific.” Jonathan Karl, president of the White House Correspondents’ Association, called on Trump and “everybody associated with this conference to denounce this video and affirm that violence has no place in our society.”
In contrast, Logan Cook struck a very different chord, claiming in an official statement that the video was “CLEARLY satirical” and the violence was “metaphoric.” Cook likened the video to Shakespeare in the Park’s 2017 production of Julius Caesar, in which Caesar was depicted as a Trump-like figure. He concluded by writing, “MemeWorld stands behind TheGeekzTeam and will REMAIN supportive of him in the future.”
It is no surprise that Cook is standing behind TheGeekzTeam’s violent video, the theme of which echoes Trump’s own claims that the free press is the “enemy of the people.” Although the Kingsman video was not posted to MemeWorld, other MemeWorld content appears to endorse violence against journalists and political opponents.
Take, for instance, a GIF of former White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders slapping CNN reporter Jim Acosta. That post is titled “What we all want to do to Acosta” and was made by Mad Liberals, one of 25 “Creators” listed on Cook’s site.
While the Sanders-Acosta gif could perhaps pass for slapstick comedy, MemeWorld also features more extreme content, such as a doctored scene from the 2009 film Inglourious Basterds by creator Devil’s Advocate. In it, a baseball bat-wielding Attorney General William Barr approaches a prisoner of war, a robotic figure wearing a tinfoil hat labeled “Fake News” whose face morphs into that of various journalists. Barr smashes the bat against the prisoner’s head, knocking a tiny George Soros out of its skull. After the prisoner collapses, Barr continues to rain blows on the body, and the face changes into an image known as the NPC meme.