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Steve Martin's DIY hack lets fans recognize him with his face mask on

Steve Martin's face mask joke trended on Twitter. (Photo: Noam Galai/Getty Images for Meteor Shower)
Steve Martin's face mask joke trended on Twitter. (Photo: Noam Galai/Getty Images for Meteor Shower)

Steve Martin’s DIY fix for masked celebrities who want recognition is brilliant. Just wear a name sign.

“I always wear a mask when I go outside,” the actor tweeted on Saturday. “But something about it was leaving me anxious and unsettled. I thought about the problem, addressed it, and here is the solution.” The 75-year-old tweeted a photo of himself balancing a piece of paper on his head that reads, “Steve Martin” with an arrow pointing downward.

Related: Steve Martin is worried about catching the coronavirus

Martin’s tweet started trending that morning with Kevin Bacon, Ice-T and Jimmy Kimmel spreading the joke. During the coronavirus pandemic, celebrities have advocated for face masks, including Tom Hanks and Rita Wilson (both of whom battled COVID-19 infections in March), Chrissy Teigen, Matthew McConaughey, Jennifer Aniston and Sharon Stone. In a social media PSA, Chelsea Handler even fashioned a bra top from two masks. “Please find a mask and put it on any part of your body!” she said in an Instagram video.

This week, fans got their hopes up when Father of the Bride director Nancy Meyers hinted that a cast reunion could be in the works. “If he thought a wedding was a lot, how would he react to 2020? Coming soon to the phone in your hand!” she wrote on Instagram. In the 1991 film, Martin (George Banks) and Diane Keaton (Nina Banks) play overly-nostalgic parents to Kimberly Williams-Paisley, whose character Annie becomes engaged.

In the 1995 sequel, George navigates the pregnancy of Annie — and Nina. Answering a tweet asking whether a third installment of the film was possible, Martin tweeted, “Enigmatic, isn’t it?”

For the latest coronavirus news and updates, follow along at https://news.yahoo.com/coronavirus. According to experts, people over 60 and those who are immunocompromised continue to be the most at risk. If you have questions, please reference the CDC’s and WHO’s resource guides.

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