Hackers pulling off a Hamburglar 2.0 move on Burger King's Twitter account livened up a ho-hum Presidents' Day for the Internet.
Twitter reacted with its usual 140 character McBites of snappy commentary, turning a whopper of a social media oopsie turned into tasty treat of entertainment -- unless you work for Burger King.
Check out 10 of our favorite funny reactions below and add your picks in the comments.
Somebody needs to tell Burgerking that 'whopper123' isn't a secure password.— Simon Osborne (@flibblesan) February 18, 2013
Is the Hamburglar behind this?— Jordan Cohen (@jorcohen) February 18, 2013
This is why Burger King should use 2 sauce authentication.— Samir Mezrahi (@samir) February 18, 2013
150 Social Media Consultants type the headline "What The Burger King Hack Means For Brands" at the same time all across New York City— Ryan Broderick (@ryanpbroderick) February 18, 2013
Somebody hacked @burgerking making this the first time on the internet anyone has ever mentioned Burger King.— Philip DeFranco (@PhillyD) February 18, 2013
i was having a terrible day until burger king got hacked— gina (@donutliam) February 18, 2013
BREAKING: CIA refuses to comment on allegations Ronald McDonald has been McFlurry-boarded for intel on Burger King attack— Rex Huppke (@RexHuppke) February 18, 2013
If we’ve learned anything from the @burgerking hacking, it’s that Social Media Managers sleep in on holidays.— Jensen Karp (@JensenClan88) February 18, 2013
If @burgerking can't keep it together, what chance do the rest of us have?— c o r s o (@WhyofCorso) February 18, 2013
dear burger king,u cannot have it ur way on twitter-mcdonalds— ≋monica≋ (@acidniall) February 18, 2013
BONUS: Mashable's Alex Fitzpatrick got Wendy's to chime in on the hack. Seems like the red head isn't a suspect.