Pajama Boy

[3][4] The tweet and pajama-clad man featured in it were quickly dubbed "Pajama Boy", and mocked and ridiculed across social media, largely by conservatives.

"[8][9] Libertarian commentator Nick Gillespie, writing in the Reason magazine blog, wrote that "for many — arguably most — Americans, this guy is hipster douchitude on a cracker.

"[11] Analyzing the perceived issues with the campaign, however, Salon wrote that "Organizing for America has a tendency to try to promote Obamacare on Twitter with images that, one imagines, they think will be potentially viral.

"[12] Conservative commentator C. Bradley Thompson coined the phrase "pajama-boy Nietzscheans" to criticize other right-wing authors, usually young men, who prefer atavistic, escapist fantasies to realistic policy discussions.

Thompson’s essay includes an edited version of the original Pajama Boy photo with Friedrich Nietzsche’s face superimposed on it.