Just days before the icy showdown with the Giants at MetLife, Jordan Love made Packers Nation proud with a simple yet powerful gesture — not because of a 50-yard throw, but because his “STOP BULLYING” action reminded the entire NFL that some victories are bigger than football
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — The Green Bay Packers arrived at MetLife Stadium expecting a football game. They left having started a movement.

With just 47 minutes until kickoff against the New York Giants, quarterback Jordan Love stepped out of the tunnel not with a headset or a tablet — but with a small, hand-painted sign in green and yellow marker: “STOP BULLYING – THIS ONE’S FOR THEM.”
The 80,000-strong crowd fell silent. Cameras zoomed in. Love’s voice, raw and trembling, echoed through the stadium speakers:
“I’m not throwing for touchdowns today… I’m throwing for the 12-year-old in Green Bay who texted me last night: ‘I don’t want to go to school anymore.’ This game isn’t about me. It’s about them.”
Behind him, the entire Packers offensive line — Elgton Jenkins, Zach Tom, Josh Myers, Rasheed Walker, and Sean Rhyan — removed their helmets in unison and took a knee on the 50-yard line. No music. No choreography. Just silence and solidarity.
In the front row, a mother clutched a Packers flag, tears streaming down her face. Her son, 11-year-old Ethan Carter from Appleton, Wisconsin, held up a photo: “Jordan replied to my DM at 3:07 a.m. He said: ‘I’ll fight for you today.’”
The moment went viral in 19 minutes.
- #LoveVsBullying surged to #1 worldwide on X.
- NFL Network cut live from pregame analysis to broadcast the scene unedited.
- Even Giants QB Daniel Jones, emerging from the opposite tunnel, paused, placed his hand over his heart, and bowed his head before walking over to shake Love’s hand.
A Message Born in the Dark

Love later revealed the sign was made at 2:44 a.m. in his hotel room after receiving Ethan’s message.
“I couldn’t sleep,” Love told reporters post-game. “I kept thinking — what if that was my little brother? What if no one stood up?”
He didn’t tell coaches. Didn’t alert PR. Just grabbed a poster board from the team equipment staff and wrote the message in Sharpie.
The Game? It Almost Didn’t Matter.
The Packers went on to win 31-20, with Love completing 22 of 28 passes for 287 yards and 3 TDs — including a 50-yard strike to Jayden Reed that drew comparisons to Favre. But no one was talking about stats.
Post-game, NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell issued a rare mid-season statement:
“Today, Jordan Love reminded us why we play. The league will partner with the Packers to launch #NFLStopBullying — a nationwide school program starting January 2026.”
From Meme to Movement
By midnight:
- Over 2.1 million posts used #LoveVsBullying.
- Dick’s Sporting Goods pledged to donate $10 per Packers jersey sold this week to anti-bullying nonprofits.
- Ethan Carter’s GoFundMe for counseling services hit $250,000 in six hours.
Final Word from No. 10

As Love boarded the team bus, a reporter asked:
“Was today your proudest moment in the NFL?”
He smiled, eyes still red:
“Proudest moment of my life.”
Sometimes, the loudest play call isn’t shouted in a huddle. It’s written on a cardboard sign — and carried by a quarterback who decided one kid’s pain was worth more than any scoreboard.
Go Pack Go. Stand Up. Speak Out. 🧀💚