What made the clip especially meme‑worthy was Musk’s reaction. In several videos and photos from the evening, he raised his eyebrows, sighed, or pulled playful facial expressions while posing with other executives, including Apple CEO Tim Cook. These reactions quickly turned the moment into an internet meme.
The selfie carried extra symbolism because Lei Jun is not just a fellow entrepreneur—he now leads a company competing directly with Tesla in the electric‑vehicle market.
Xiaomi, long known for smartphones, has expanded aggressively into EVs, putting it in increasing competition with Tesla. That made the selfie feel like a mix of fan moment, industry rivalry, and mutual recognition between tech leaders.
Adding to the story, Lei Jun has previously been described as an admirer of Musk and Tesla, and was among the early owners of a Tesla Model S in China.
The viral moment happened during a visit that was already unusual for the large number of business leaders involved.
President Trump’s trip to Beijing included a delegation of major U.S. corporate executives, such as:
The business leaders accompanied the political delegation as discussions with Chinese officials covered trade barriers, technology cooperation, and economic relations between the two countries.
This blending of political diplomacy with corporate participation is often described as business diplomacy, where CEOs act as influential stakeholders in geopolitical negotiations.
Despite the viral attention on the selfie, the summit itself dealt with far heavier issues.
Discussions between Washington and Beijing touched on topics including:
These issues dominated the official agenda of the meetings between Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping, even as social media attention drifted toward the tech‑celebrity interactions.
The selfie episode illustrates how modern diplomacy now unfolds on two parallel stages.
Behind closed doors, leaders and executives negotiate complex policy issues that shape global economics and security. But online, the public conversation often centers on short viral clips—human moments that turn powerful figures into meme material.
In this case, a few seconds of smartphone photography between two billionaire CEOs briefly overshadowed a summit focused on trade, geopolitics, and the future of U.S.–China relations.
The result was a perfect example of the modern political media cycle: serious diplomacy in the background, and a viral tech‑celebrity moment stealing the spotlight.
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