On Sunday, Donald Trump got booed. I’m not telling you anything you haven’t already watched 30 or 40 times. He got buried by nearly 100 decibels of noise at Game 5 of the World Series, as the Washington Nationals played the Houston Astros in his adopted home of Washington, D.C. while surrounded by his wife, Melania Trump, and his most faithful pets, Lindsey Graham, Matt Gaetz, and more.

His face took the following journey over an amazing 15 seconds:

It is, remarkably, a face we’ve never seen on Trump before; we’ve seen a lot of versions of this guy during his life in the spotlight—from his time as the ’80s mascot for corporate greed to his time as a bankrupt casino owner to his time as a racist conspiracy theorist. Fifty years is a long time in the spotlight—you see a guy from a lot of angles.

Like we’ve seen Trump do his best impression of “serious person,” the whites of his eyes surrounded by the whites of his eyelids surrounded by a fresh layer of whatever it is that makes his skin look like that. We’ve seen Trump look like your angry dad and a toddler in timeout all at once. We’ve seen him look dopey. We’ve seen him do his best used-car-salesman smile while eating a taco salad. We’ve seen him try to suck up all the ghosts (?).

And we’ve managed to see him handle public criticism relatively well, or, at the very least, exceed expectations in that arena. Remember when members of the United Nations laughed at him when he said, “In less than two years, my administration has accomplished more than almost any administration” in American history? He laughed too, like it was his joke all along, and said, “Didn’t expect that reaction, but that’s okay.” We've even seen him get booed at a sporting event before...well, kind of. In Atlanta in 2018, as the University of Alabama and University of Georgia geared up to play the College Football Playoff National Championship—the first football game he attended as president—his reception sounded mixed; you couldn’t argue it was overwhelming negative. But at the World Series on Sunday, it was pretty cut-and-dry. The “Veterans for Impeachment” sign behind home plate put the finest point on it.