![Tim Cook](https://static-ssl.businessinsider.com/image/56b8b7792e52651c008b5a3d-4608-3456/ap_895499807909.jpg)
AP
What he didn't realize at the time was that he was inadventertantly giving Twitter users the chance to make some jokes about the action shot, and they didn't pass up the opportunity to turn that photo into a snarky meme.
Now, it's no secret that $4, so people were quick to give Cook heat about the out-of-focus photo, with plenty of joking references to Apple's famous "Shot on iPhone" marketing campaign.
The number of jokes grew to point that "Tim Cook" became a trending topic on Twitter. An hour later he tweeted out another photo that was in focus. Whether it was as a response to people poking fun at him on Twitter or not is uncertain, and the original photo hasn't been deleted. But it just goes to show that even Tim Cook isn't immune to having a photo meme-ified.
The original photo
The jokes
I thought I was being funny making fun of $4's blurry photo. But after seeing the mainstream news jump on it. Now I feel stupid.
- Ryan Poolos (@EmperiorEric) $4