Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont sits alone at the inauguration ceremony in a beige parka, legs and arms crossed, socially distanced. Hugging his hands are a pair of large mittens bearing a white and brown pattern. They look soft. They look warm. They look vaguely familiar.
Of all the historic images from the inauguration of Joe Biden as the 46th president, this might be the most unexpected. But a photo of Sanders bundled up against the Washington cold went viral almost immediately.
Dionne Warwick tweeted at him, "Looking warm." Actor Bradley Whitford tweeted, "One of the reasons people love @SenSander is they know he would have worn exactly the same thing if he had won the presidency." Many, many, many people on Twitter claimed Sanders as their uncle or grandfather.
The image of him on that chair was Photoshopped into famous scenarios, real and fictional, including the throne from "Game of Thrones," the cover of Kendrick Lamar's "To Pimp a Butterfly" and the iconic photograph "Lunch atop a Skyscraper."
Sanders bobbleheads are forthcoming. At one point, on CBS News, Sanders was even asked to address his attire. He said: "In Vermont, we know something about the cold. And we're not so concerned about good fashion. We just want to keep warm."
We're already familiar with the Burton parka, which became a meme after he wore it in a 2019 campaign ad. But one question persisted: Where did he get those cozy mittens?
The answer: Jen Ellis, a second-grade teacher in Essex Junction, Vt.
Among the things she's passionate about are Bernie Sanders, teaching her class (which, during the pandemic, she's done in an outdoor classroom she built) and mittens.