A Chicago-born cardinal walks into a conclave. The rest of the joke tells itself.
In the breathless day since Pope Leo XIVโs election as the first American pontiff, the memes, doctored images and tongue-in-cheek references have piled up deeper than Chicagoโs pizza and more loaded than its hot dog, seemingly irresistible to comics and commoners alike.
Stained-glass windows depicting a dunking Michael Jordan? A change in canon law to make ketchup-topped frankfurters a sin? Cameos in The Bear? All of it apparently as tempting as the forbidden fruit.
โYou just saw a billion jokes,โ says Chad Nackers, who was raised Catholic and now presides as editor-in-chief of The Onion, the satirical site that heralded Robert Prevostโs elevation with an image of the smiling pontiff encased in a poppyseed-dotted bun.
โConclave Selects First Chicago-Style Pope,โ read the headline.
The pageantry of the church and the idea of a man who acts as a voice for God, Nackers says, combine for fertile humorous ground no matter the pontiff. Having him hail from the US, though, and a city as distinct as Chicago, opens up a whole new world of funny.