2024 Paris Olympic Logo Sparks Hilarious Social Media Reactions
The Paris Olympics is five years away, but the logo for it has already been released. On France 24, they explain that the symbol is a combination of the medal, the flame, and Marianne, “The personification of the French Republic since the revolution in 1789.”
They also clarify that the logo will be used for both the Olympics and the Paralympic Games.
Since the logo has been released, people on Twitter have had a field day describing what they think the logo looks like. One user said it looks like a Fanta commercial character, another compared it to the Tinder logo. One person even said, “Why does the Paris 2024 Olympics logo look like it drives an Audi TT, complains to every manager it sees and is named Karen!?”
See some of the best reactions to the Olympics logo below.
#Paris2024 pic.twitter.com/25slh7ZlEl
— carladalvy (@CarlaDalvy) October 22, 2019
The Paris 2024 Olympic logo would like to speak to the manager pic.twitter.com/sCdBTwvKmk
— Joe Gunn (@joegunn90) October 21, 2019
https://twitter.com/ma_victoria/status/1186368462798708736
— ʀafiki 🦊🌈 (@rafikiscope) October 21, 2019
— Giuseppe 🇪🇺 (@Giu_GiuM) October 21, 2019
— Grigoris Thanásoulas (@gregthanas) October 22, 2019
Why does the Paris 2024 Olympics logo look like it drives an Audi TT, complains to every manager it sees and is named Karen!? #Paris2024 https://t.co/Fo4fC24Aej
— Andrew (@lavery_andrew) October 22, 2019
— Baptiste (@bambou31700) October 21, 2019
— Bambo (@Bambo76Bambo) October 21, 2019
The Paris 2024 Olympics emblem has the eternal spirit of Carly Rae Jepsen. pic.twitter.com/fKu8aK9xcs
— Tony Gomez (@gonytomez) October 21, 2019
When you order something online vs. when it arrives #Paris2024 pic.twitter.com/7KRCiOF7kC
— many (producer’s choice) 🇫🇷 🟢⚪️🔴 🇮🇱 (@m_a_ny) October 21, 2019
The Paris 2024 Olympic logo would like to speak to the manager pic.twitter.com/sCdBTwvKmk
— Joe Gunn (@joegunn90) October 21, 2019
In response to the reaction on social media, organizers have said, “While the logo has divided the internet, the goal remains to ‘honor French culture and creativity.”