When I see folks being interviewed in a studio setting, or in public, wearing a mask, I figure there could be a lot of people around them, people we can't see. You know, on purpose, we're not supposed to see them, the camera crew keep them out of the shot.
So there might be 15 people in a small space there with Jeremy, and we'd never know it.
Knowing a bit about Jeremy's character as we do, I seriously doubt it would be virtue signaling. It could be "setting an example." or it might be genuine concern on Jeremy's part, because he knows that whatever he gets, he brings back to his family and his football team.
I'll never fault a person for wearing a mask, if they think they need one. Especially when I don't know the whole deal of what's going on around them.
Now the folks I will laugh at are the journalists who zoom in to a virtual press conference, from their own homes, who insist on wearing a mask. Those guys, that's just pure virtue signaling. "We're setting a good example," they'll say. Setting a good example of how you should wear a mask in your own home? Your viewers aren't stupid, and context does matter. Heh.