Trump was captured on Facebook Live during his visit to Paris saying, "You know, you're in such good shape... beautiful," to French first lady Brigitte Macron.
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In response to the interaction, Reebok posted an elaborate subtweet in the form of a chart created to help people determine when it is appropriate to say the words Trump did to the first lady.
In case you were wondering when it IS appropriate to say, "You're in such good shape...beautiful,"... THIS: pic.twitter.com/Z1cnnRD8Ut
— Reebok (@Reebok) July 14, 2017
According to Reebok, the only scenario where these words would be considered a compliment is when admiring an old action figure from your childhood that survived a long hibernation in your parents' basement.
When asked about the tweet, a Reebok spokesperson told Mashable, "Reebok believes that we should all strive to Be More Human in our lives: to push and challenge our boundaries physically, mentally and socially. That also means supporting one another in all of those ways."
"It seems there is still a lot of confusion about how to do that, and perhaps this little reminder will help," the spokesperson added.
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The tweet was received by the audience both positively and negatively. Some of the reactions were:
https://twitter.com/peaceforus4ever/status/886293919713161222
Bravo. Seriously, *this* is what 2017 should look like. @Reebok https://t.co/lK2THnGl0Y
— MsDeNovo (@MissDeNovo) July 15, 2017
Nice trolling, @Reebok. Here, have a "free advertisement" retweet. #resist https://t.co/1EQ67TvW3I
— Resists, Persists & Loves U 3,000 (@OmniGlitter) July 15, 2017
https://twitter.com/ParkerMolloy/status/886220660028186629
Holy crap @Reebok subtweeted the president and I am HERE FOR THIS 🙌🔥 https://t.co/r7SyzXvceg
— Fiddler (@cFidd) July 15, 2017
One Twitter user went on to bash Reebok's saint-like subtweet and posted:
Thank you, @Reebok, for your virtuous message about when it's appropriate to complement a woman's shape. pic.twitter.com/vuj8oe86ZL
— Jim Norton (@JimNorton) July 15, 2017
But while most people saluted the company for its attempt to school the president about when it is okay to give such kind of compliments, part of the audience was cynical about Reebok's intentions.
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