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Irish lawmaker Ivana Bacik held up a meme depicting Vice President JD Vance, in her country's parliament on Tuesday following reports a 21-year-old Norwegian tourist was refused access to the U.S.
The Vance meme phenomenon isn’t just an internet joke — it’s a collision of politics, technology and online culture, Cohen said. AI and face-altering apps like Facetune have made it easier ...
The new app from a tech innovator was inspired by a viral U.S. border control incident last month — though he warns to "use at your own risk." ...
Viral memes of Vice President JD Vance have flooded social media, depicting him in comically altered and grotesque forms. Now, Vance has responded—by posting a meme of himself.
On June 11, Mads Mikkelsen said he was denied entry at Newark Liberty International Airport because CBP found the bald, baby-faced Vance meme on his phone and considered it “extremist propaganda ...
A MEME of US Vice President JD Vance mocked up as a baby was waved in the Dail today as concerns were raised about new social media checks on students travelling to the States. The baby meme of th… ...
A Norwegian tourist says he was denied entry into the US after immigration agents took issue with a meme of Vice President JD Vance on his phone ... From a hotel video to baby oil – the BBC's Nada ...
JD Vance memes spread across the internet. Vance memes, edited images of the vice president's face, have gotten so popular on X that people are collecting them like trading cards, according to Forbes.
U.S. officials reposted a meme depicting Vice President JD Vance as bald and bloated in an attempt to refute a tourist’s claim that he was denied entry over the image. Norwegian tourist Mads ...
Tourist found with JD Vance meme on phone. 21-year-old Mads Mikkelsen (not the famous one) tells Norwegian newspaper Nordlys that he was pulled aside by customs officials at Newark Airport.
JD Vance memes spread across the internet. Vance memes, edited images of the vice president's face, have gotten so popular on X that people are collecting them like trading cards, according to Forbes.