Fly on Mike Pence’s head generates buzz in VP debate
Mike Pence and the fly. Image via AP

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Hijinks ensued. Or at least Twitter comments.

The Vice Presidential debate featured plexiglass barriers to prevent the spread of the coronavirus. They were no match for the night’s most talked-about intruder — a fly that briefly buzzed around the stage before landing and staying on Mike Pence’s head.

The incident went unmentioned onstage, with the Republican Vice President and Democratic Sen. Kamala Harris continuing to focus on the discussion of systemic racism in the justice system.

But as the insect took up residence on Pence’s white hair, the social media firestorm was immediate — and intense. It easily created more, well, buzz than nearly anything else that occurred.

“That’s not on your TV. It’s on his head,” tweeted MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow. “The fly knows,” tweeted author Stephen King. Others joked about the creature perhaps getting stuck in hair spray — or possibly now being a prime candidate for coronavirus testing.

Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden immediately got in on the act, tweeting a photo of himself clutching an orange flyswatter under the heading “Pitch in $5 to help this campaign fly.” Moments later, he tweeted again, this time highlighting “Flywillvote.com,” which took users to a website set up for his campaign to help supporters make plans to vote.

Pence had spent much of the night shaking his head in response to Harris’ answers. But the vice president didn’t appear to notice the fly’s arrival. Despite his talking and normal body movements, the hot stage lights and those virus-fighting barriers, the fly was unperturbed. It finally flew away on its own.

Wednesday night’s visitor wasn’t the first fly to take center stage at a presidential debate. In 2016, one briefly landed between Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton’s eyes during a town hall-style debate with now-President Donald Trump. Clinton didn’t flinch.

President Barack Obama, however, took action when confronted with an airborne distraction during the taping of a television interview in 2009. Obama stopped speaking to swat at a buzzing fly and tell it to “get out of here.” As interviewer John Harwood quipped, “That’s the most persistent fly I’ve ever seen,” Obama concentrated on its path and swatted it dead.

Associated Press


3 comments

  • Bonnie Hayflick

    October 8, 2020 at 7:07 am

    If you don’t vote for him, vote for her. “Vote KH”.

  • Ocean Joe

    October 8, 2020 at 7:37 am

    Don’t Flies and magats go together?

    Thought Pence won the debate, bulldozed the moderator, interrupted like Donald does, but got his points across a bit better. No matter his performance, he couldn’t escape the administration’s
    surrender to the virus nor fact that he and Trump are climate deniers. Maybe that is why the New England Journal of Medicine, calling their response a slaughter, has called for Trump’s defeat.
    A couple weeks ago Scientific American did the same. Unique that two scientific journals would each break a century of staying out of politics to go against Trump. Pence said “we’ll follow the science.” Science wants you to leave, Mikey.

  • Sonja Fitch

    October 8, 2020 at 10:38 am

    The moral of the fly is the goptrump cult sociopaths Trump and pence are not able to laugh. Part of life is to appreciate your human self! Love it! VoteBlue !

Comments are closed.


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