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David Corenswet "I Don't Like That One Bit"

Supergirl movie premiere, June 23, 2026 — Entertainment Tonight exclusive interview in which Superman actor David Corenswet was shown the viral Cinépolis promotional cup design on camera for the first time and reacted with genuine wide-eyed horror

June 26, 2026
5 min read
easy swap
Also known as: David Corenswet Supergirl Cup Reaction • I Don't Like That One Bit Meme • Superman Cup Meme • David Corenswet Horrified Face • No No No No No Meme • Supergirl Cup Reaction Meme • Corenswet Disbelief Face • Superman Shocked Meme • David Corenswet Reaction GIF • I Don't Want It Explained Meme • Supergirl Premiere Meme • Superman Horror Face • Corenswet No No No • DC Cup Meme

Try This Meme!

Swap your face into the David Corenswet "I Don't Like That One Bit" meme and join the trend.

David Corenswet Supergirl Cup Reaction GIF
Recommended: Face swap - quick and easy

On June 23, 2026, at the Supergirl movie premiere, Entertainment Tonight put a promotional drink cup in front of David Corenswet — the new Superman — and asked him to react. What followed was thirty seconds of genuine, unguarded human response: disbelief, rapid cognitive shutdown, five sequential "no"s, and a quote that immediately became the internet's newest all-purpose reaction format for unwanted information.

What Is the "I Don't Like That One Bit" Meme?

The meme is built around a specific facial expression — David Corenswet seeing something he very much did not want to see, reacting with complete authenticity — and a quote that functions as a caption for virtually any situation involving unwanted information. "I don't like that one bit… I don't understand, and I don't think I want it explained" maps onto an enormous range of human experiences: from genuinely disturbing revelations to minor everyday inconveniences.

The face-swap version is immediate: your face in Corenswet's expression = your personal "I don't like that one bit" moment. The emotion is universally legible. You don't need context about the cup to understand what the face is communicating. It reads at thumbnail scale, across platforms, without sound — and that is exactly what makes it a high-utility reaction template.

The Origin: The Viral Cup, the Premiere, and Thirty Seconds of Pure Reaction

In the lead-up to the June 2026 release of Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow — DC Studios' Milly Alcock-led superhero film — Mexican theater chain Cinépolis released a promotional drink cup designed to resemble Supergirl's costume. The cup featured her blue-and-red suit covered by a tan leather jacket. The problem: the combination of the cylindrical shape, the coloring, and the flesh-toned jacket gave the design an unmistakably anatomically suggestive appearance.

Photos of the cup spread across social media days before the premiere, generating significant viral momentum. By the time the Supergirl red carpet happened on June 23, 2026, the cup had already become its own meme cycle — it just needed a human face to complete it.

At the premiere, Entertainment Tonight's interview team showed the cup to David Corenswet (Clark Kent/Superman) and Nicholas Hoult (Lex Luthor) on camera. The footage that followed was exactly what anyone could have hoped for. Corenswet looked at the cup. His face cycled through several stages: surprise, processing, something approaching horror, and then a firm decision to close the loop entirely. "I don't like that one bit," he said. "I don't understand, and I don't think I want it explained." Hoult began to offer what the design reminded him of. Corenswet cut in immediately: "No no no no no." The clip was online within hours. By morning, it was a reaction format.

Why the Corenswet Cup Reaction Went Immediately Viral

Several forces converged to make this clip spread as fast as it did:

  • The cup was already famous: By the time Corenswet saw it on camera, the Cinépolis cup had been viral for days. His reaction was the natural conclusion to an ongoing meme cycle that had been running without its protagonist — the internet was already primed and waiting.
  • The quote is perfectly formed: "I don't like that one bit… I don't understand, and I don't think I want it explained" is grammatically complete, quotable in isolation, and applicable to an enormous range of situations. It functions as a reaction caption for anything you'd rather not know more about.
  • He played it completely straight: There is no performance in Corenswet's reaction. No winking at the camera, no meta-acknowledgment of the viral moment in progress. He looked at the cup and genuinely did not like it. That authenticity is what separates a viral reaction clip from a staged one.
  • The "no no no no no" is a secondary meme: The moment Hoult tried to make the joke explicit and Corenswet shut it down with five rapid "no"s became a distinct GIF format of its own — the image of someone desperately preventing an already-bad situation from getting worse.
  • DC fan energy doubled the reach: The reaction was adopted simultaneously as a self-deprecating DC merch meme and as an introduction to Corenswet's genuinely likable, unguarded persona ahead of his franchise debut. Both communities shared it at the same time, doubling its reach from the start.
David Corenswet (Superman) reacting to the viral Supergirl cup design at the 2026 Supergirl premiere — his expression of wide-eyed disbelief became the internet's newest reaction meme template
David Corenswet at the Supergirl premiere, June 23, 2026 — the moment before "I don't like that one bit."

Why David Corenswet's Face Is Perfect for AI Face Swaps

From a technical standpoint, this template is one of the cleanest celebrity reaction shots available. Entertainment Tonight premiere footage is shot in controlled conditions: even, forward-facing lighting, consistent illumination, no motion blur. Corenswet's face occupies most of the frame and the expression is held for a clear, sustained beat — not a fleeting micro-expression that face-detection AI struggles with, but a fully committed, readable reaction shot.

This template is rated easy on MEEMES. Most well-lit, forward-facing selfies or headshots map cleanly onto it on the first attempt. The resulting swap carries immediate interpretive weight: your face + this expression = your personal refusal to process whatever information just arrived. The meme communicates clearly at thumbnail scale — even at reduced size, the emotion lands exactly as intended.

The swap works best deployed as a reaction to information you did not ask for and did not want: a group chat update that breaks everyone's plans, a bank statement at the wrong moment, or any message that opens with "so I have news." The Corenswet cup face is the face of a person who has encountered something, processed it fully, and arrived at the unambiguous conclusion that they would have preferred not to.

How to Make Your Own "I Don't Like That One Bit" Face Swap on MEEMES

  1. Go to MEEMES and search for "David Corenswet" or "I don't like that one bit" in the Trending section, or paste the Tenor GIF link directly.
  2. Upload a clear, forward-facing photo. The template's even premiere lighting is forgiving — most indoor selfies and headshots work well. Avoid extreme side angles or heavy backlighting.
  3. Use the alignment tool to match your eye level and chin line to Corenswet's position in the Entertainment Tonight interview frame.
  4. Hit Generate. Since this template is rated easy, most clear photos produce a clean result on the first attempt — the controlled interview lighting makes AI face-detection especially reliable here.
  5. Download and deploy: send it as a reaction to any piece of unwanted information, post it as a reply when someone explains something you didn't need to know, or use it as a caption any time "I don't understand, and I don't think I want it explained" captures the moment perfectly.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is the David Corenswet "I don't like that one bit" meme?

The meme captures a June 23, 2026 moment from the Supergirl movie premiere in which Entertainment Tonight showed Superman actor David Corenswet the viral Cinépolis promotional cup design on camera for the first time. The cup — shaped to resemble Supergirl's costume with a flesh-colored jacket — had already gone viral online because of its unintentionally suggestive appearance. Corenswet's genuine wide-eyed horror became the meme template; his quote "I don't like that one bit… I don't understand, and I don't think I want it explained" sealed its status as a reaction format.

What is the Supergirl cup and why did it go viral?

The Supergirl cup was a promotional movie tie-in drink sold by Mexican theater chain Cinépolis ahead of the Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow film. The cup was designed to look like Supergirl's blue-and-red costume covered by her tan leather jacket — but the combination of the cylindrical shape, the blue-and-red coloring, and the flesh-toned jacket gave it an unintentionally phallic appearance. Photos spread across social media days before the premiere, becoming a viral meme in their own right. Corenswet's filmed reaction to seeing it became the natural conclusion to that meme cycle.

When did the David Corenswet meme go viral?

The clip went viral on June 23, 2026, the same day as the Supergirl premiere. The Entertainment Tonight exclusive was released online immediately after the premiere event, and Corenswet's wide-eyed horror spread across X, TikTok, Reddit, and Instagram within hours — particularly within DC fan communities already deep in Supergirl cup discourse. By the following morning, "I don't like that one bit" had become an established reaction format across multiple platforms.

What exactly did David Corenswet say when he saw the Supergirl cup?

When the cup design was shown to him on camera during the Entertainment Tonight interview, Corenswet responded: "I don't like that one bit… I don't understand, and I don't think I want it explained." His co-star Nicholas Hoult (Lex Luthor) began to explain what it reminded him of, at which point Corenswet immediately cut in with a rapid "No no no no no" to shut down the description. Both the original quote and the five-syllable refusal became independent GIF formats.

Is David Corenswet's face easy to use for AI face swaps?

Yes — rated easy on MEEMES. The Entertainment Tonight interview was shot in standard premiere press setup: even, controlled lighting, forward-facing with no motion blur or complex backgrounds. Corenswet's expression is held for a clear, readable beat — wide eyes, dropped jaw, the full weight of a man in genuine disbelief. His face is large in frame and completely unobscured. Most clear, well-lit selfies map cleanly onto this template on the first attempt, making it one of the more beginner-friendly celebrity face-swap templates on the platform.