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Meet the Saanich creator behind the Garden Spicer ornament

Lisa Kadonaga, a lecturer at UVic, created the Garden Spicer for fun
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Saanich’s Lisa Kadonaga, creator of the Garden Spicer ornament, holds the downloadable Sean Spicer image she shared on Facebook on May 11. The post was shared 110,000 times and Garden Spicer ornaments started showing up in places across North America. Travis Paterson/News Staff

With controversy swirling around the fallout from U.S. President Donald Trump’s decision to fire his FBI director, a Saanich woman’s fresh take on the situation has put her in the international spotlight.

On May 11 Saanich resident Lisa Kadonaga shared a do-it-yourself cut and paste ornament she dubbed (and hash tagged) the Garden Spicer. By May 12, she was receiving messages from friends regarding how fast the meme was being shared on the internet.

It came from the fallout of White House press secretary Sean Spicer infamously hiding ‘among the bushes’ last week in order to delay an on-camera appearance explaining Trump’s abrupt termination of James Comey as head of the FBI.

”It’s been nutty, it went a little crazy there,” said Kadonaga, a sessional lecturer of geography at the University of Victoria and Camosun College and with a green thumb to boot. “I saw a photoshopped image of Spicer’s head in a bush and I thought, that’s doable. But after I made the post I went to bed and I thought nothing of it.”

The next morning she received a message form a friend who said they saw the Garden Spicer on Twitter.

“I said, ‘it can’t be mine, I don’t have a Twitter account.’”

The post soon had 110,000 shares, with outlets such as the L.A. Times reporting a Garden Spicer on Santa Monica Boulevard and Facebook shares showing the cutout peering from the shrubs of a North Carolina road. Over the weekend they turned up in gardens, traffic meridians and even in Mother’s Day bouquets.

By Thursday the link to the Spicer image online had frozen (or was temporarily suspended, she figured). By Monday Kadonaga was fielding calls from major Canadian television, radio and online media agencies and the story showed up in dozens of publications online and in print, making its way all the way to the Washington Post by Tuesday.

“I figured it’s Victoria, people like gardening, but I didn’t think the people who liked crafts, gardening and politics were that numerous,” Kadonaga said.

“I wasn’t trying to trivialize the situation,” she added. “There are people who said it distracts from the real issues, but we use satire to take a step back and examine a situation… as silly as it looks.”

Kadonaga believes the reason it caught on so well is also because the photo, by Getty Images photographer Chip Somodevilla, captures some sincerity in Spicer’s eyes.

“I think there’s this seed of sympathy for Spicer,” Kadonaga said. “Other people [are put in a tough spot and] have had to do a job without the information or tools they need, and they tried anyways because it’s their job.

“At least people are getting exercise putting it in the garden and getting a kick out of it.”

Evidently, the photographer Somodevilla got a kick out of it too as he retweeted it on Friday.

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