And just for good measure:
Ouch.
ABC reporter Louise Milligan was among those to express concern about the footage.
"The camera can, contrary to the cliche, sometimes lie, but I have watched this over and over and there is something mesmerisingly worrying about Melania Trump's face in this," she wrote in a tweet that was liked more than 2800 times.
Others saw the funny side.
"Imagine having to remind a professional model to smile for a photograph," one viewer commented.
"That's the Usain Bolt of smiles," another commented.
The awkward moment, which came during a worldwide uprising over the death in custody of black man George Floyd, is the latest in a long list of moments that between the pair that have made tongues wag.
One such moment came in October last year when Donald Trump reportedly told a group of people at a Republican fundraiser that his wife would not cry for him if he was shot.
The moment, reported by the Guardian, was dismissed as a joke by those in attendance.
It came about during a conversation regarding the shooting of Republican and US House Committee whip, Steve Scalise.
Scalise was among a handful of people who were shot by James Hodgkinson during a charity baseball game in Virginia in 2017. He underwent surgery and made a full recovery.
According to those in attendance, Trump said of Scalise's wife: "She cried her eyes out when I met her at the hospital that fateful day … I mean not many wives would react that way to tragedy, I know mine wouldn't."
It might've been a light moment misconstrued without the benefit of context. Or maybe Trump genuinely believes his wife would take such news in her stride, as she appears to with everything else.
Which is a neat little segue into Melania Trump's cavalier attitude to rumours of her husband's infidelity.
During a chat with America's ABC News in October 2018, Mrs Trump brushed aside questions about alleged cheating.
She was told by a reporter that "you did agree to do this interview, to your credit, with no preconditions".
"Correct," she replied.
"It has been a tough year for you personally," the reporter continued. "You're not the first First Lady to have to deal with her husband's alleged infidelities."
Mrs Trump was then asked whether the rumours have put a strain on her marriage.
"It is not concern and focus of mine," she said. "I'm a mother and a First Lady, and I have much more important things to think about and do.
"I know people like to speculate and media like to speculate about our marriage."
In the same interview, Mrs Trump was asked to comment on Stormy Daniels, the porn star who accused Trump of having an affair. She brushed the questions aside.
For the sake of the record, here's a key timeline of events and where Daniels claims she fits in.
In January, 2005, Donald and Melania marry. In March, 2006, their son Barron is born. Daniels claims that in July of that same year she and Mr Trump began an "intimate relationship" that continued until the following year.
Asked by the ABC reporter if she loves her husband, Mrs Trump responded: "Yes, we are fine. Yes, it's what media speculate, and it's gossip. It's not always correct stuff."
So … not "always" correct.
Not exactly pouring water on the fire.
That fire is not helped by the sheer volume of hand-holding mishaps the couple have endured in front of the media.
Like this one:
And this one:
And also these ones: