A Southeastern Conference of Schools (SEC) student has recently become the talk of the town X. Her name began popping up in an apparent smear campaign on an X space informally dubbed the Burnerverse — comprising various anonymous accounts of former and current SEC fraternity members.
The first one to post about her was an anonymous account on X named Arthur Cacciatore (now changed to Gustavo Rocque). The account shared a photo of her and her supposed partner on June 24, 2024, and warned the latter of her purported infidelity.
Soon, several other accounts from the Burnerverse community began posting memes on the same site, with some trolling her. Following the negative online attention, the student seemingly made some of her social media accounts private.
Although it is not proven whether or not she cheated on one of her romantic partners, the curiosity surrounding the matter reached Reddit as well. A user Bomasaurus_Rex posted a thread to the /r/Frat subreddit on June 25, 2024, inquiring about the memes that have flooded the Burnerverse X space.
How did the memes about the Southeastern Conference of Schools (SEC) student spread through the Burnerverse on X?
The individual who shared the first post about the student in question described himself as a “divorced” and “racist” former Sigma Nu member from 2008 in his X bio. In the caption of the photo, he addressed the man next to the student and wrote:
“Hey bud….its art here, just wanted to let ya down easy….your uhhh girlfriend? Yeah so she may or may not have had s** with like 35% of the SEC. Solid h**d tho…stay strong brother.”
His account is now “temporarily unavailable” on the platform as it violated Twitter Media Policy. However, before the account got suspended, the post garnered around 7K likes. Soon, other anonymous accounts from the Burnerverse began reposting the SEC student's photo, adding to the discussion. On June 25, X user @cryptoxa_ shared a Corey Harris driving meme, which has garnered over 2.8K likes as of this writing.
On the same day, another user @CridneySrosby, shared a meme featuring a man seemingly explaining the meme and Burnerverse to a woman. This post has acquired over 3K likes as of now.
X user @DuragRebel posted a comparison of recently viral women later that day. The post included the Hawk Tuah Girl and the Oilers Girl alongside the Southeastern Conference of Schools student. The tweet amassed over 54K likes.
The discussion spread across TikTok when user @taylorscoldtakes shared a video explaining the event and how the SEC student went viral on Burnerverse. The video gathered over 1 million views before it was deleted.