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Evil Toddler

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About

Evil Toddler is an advice animal image macro series featuring a photograph of a laughing child with captions describing mischievous pranks and behaviors associated with young children.

Origin

On October 19th, 2012, Redditor altmedsol submitted a photo to the /r/pics[1] subreddit titled “Evil Plan,” featuring a smiling toddler clasping his hands menacingly (shown below, left). In the comment section, Redditor Lochness Digital linked to a photoshopped version of the boy’s image edited to look like a Snidley Whiplash[2] scene from the 1960s animated television series Dudley Do-Right (shown below, right). Within three months, the post received over 14,000 up votes and 200 comments.



Spread

The same day, Redditor tattedspyder submitted an image macro to the /r/AdviceAnimals[3] subreddit, featuring altmedsol’s original photo with the caption “I will save all of my urine / for right in the middle of the changing!” (shown below). Over the span of three months, the post received more than 10,100 up votes and 100 comments.



On October 22nd, The Huffington Post[4] and the Internet humor blog Pleated Jeans[5] published compilations of notable examples from the series. In the coming weeks, additional examples of the meme were posted on the Internet humor sites BuzzFeed[6] and UpRoxx.[7] On December 2nd, 2012, a Facebook[9] page titled “Złowrogi Brzdąc” (“Sinister Toddler” in English) was created, which featured Polish-language variations of the image macro series. Within the next two months, the page accumulated more than 20,000 likes. On January 19th, 2013 Redditor AlphaPigs submitted an image macro describing the placement of stickers on car windows (shown below) to the /r/AdviceAnimals[8] subreddit. The post garnered over 7,200 up votes and 50 comments in the next three weeks.



Various Examples



In Polish Language



Search Interest

External References


Damn Daniel

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About

“Damn Daniel” is a catchphrase that stems from a Twitter video montage featuring a voiceover of a teenager complimenting his friend Daniel on his fashionable attire on a number of different occasions. Due to the narrator’s particular obsession with Daniel’s sneaker shoes, the video has drawn comparisons to the 2015 viral video sensation “What Are Those?!”

Origin

On February 15th, 2016, Twitter user joshholzz, whose real name is Josh Holz, tweeted the original “Damn Daniel” video.[1] It received more than 16,000 likes in the first 48 hours, according to Mashable;[2] four days after the initial tweet it had 121,938 retweets and 148,382 likes. In it. the narrator can be repeatedly heard praising fellow student Daniel Lara’s look, including his “White Vans.” According to the Twitter account, both boys attend Riverside Poly High School in Riverside, California.[3]




Spread

The spread was initially spurred by other students at Riverside Poly High School, who retweeted the video frequently. On February 16th, the tweet was retweeted by several fake WorldStarHipHop Twitter accounts, which are generally operated as third-party re-uploaders; these accounts, which included WORLDSTARC0MEDY[4] and WORIDSTARHIPH0P,[5] helped the video receive tens of thousands of more views and retweets, increasing the spread of the original video.

On February 17th, the account Four_Pins created the Damn Daniel starter pack, which included White Vans; the tweet received over 19,000 retweets and 23,000 likes.[6] On February 21st, an eBay seller named m_shopping_loft created a listing for a pair of white Vans attributed to Daniel Lara;[14] while they were not the real shoes, they were quickly bid up to more than $400,000 on eBay; several copycat listings also received high bids.[15] Among many other media mentions, the video’s catchphrases were used in the title of an article about Justin Bieber, who was also seen wearing white vans.



The video’s popularity caused #DamnDaniel to initially trend briefly on Twitter, especially on the West Coast; however, the hashtag consistently began trending on Vine through February 24th, where it acquired many parodies from popular Viners like King Bach.[16] When Daniel Lara and Josh Holz appeared on the Ellen Degeneres show on February 23rd, Degeneres estimated that by that point, the original video had been seen almost 45 million times through various sources.

Brand Engagement

On February 18th, Vans tweeted about the video, creating a Twitter poll with two options: “Back At It” and “With the White Vans;” as of February 19th, with 5 days to go, the poll had received almost 50,000 votes.[7] Clorox[8] and Axe[9] also tweeted about the video, making jokes about the whiteness of the Vans and Daniel’s physical appearance, respectively. In addition, both Axe Body Spray and Denny’s Restaurants created popular tweets based on the meme.[17] On February 23rd, Daniel Lara tweeted that Vans had invited him to star in a commercial.[18]



Swatting

On February 23rd, 2016, ABC7 Los Angeles reported that the owner of the Twitter account which had originally posted the Damn Daniel tweet, @josholzz, had been swatted. According to the report, a false 911 call had been made reporting that someone at a residence in Riverside, California had shot their mother with an AK-47. The police arrived to find out that the call was fake.[12]

DURRPLANT



DURRPLANT is a meme unintentionally made by YouTube user I Hate Everything to mock and compare the equivalent of the Damn Daniel meme and has later been edited and remixed in other media platforms.

Various Examples



Search Interest



External References

Carl the Cuck and AIDS Skrillex

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About

Carl the Cuck and AIDS Skrillex are nicknames given to two unidentified young men featured in a viral video depicting a clash between supporters of Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump and anti-Trump demonstrators. After clips of the two protesters began circulating on 4chan’s /pol/ (politics) board and Reddit in mid-March 2016, the two were mocked by many for their argument tactics, including the invocation of Godwin’s Law and discounting a Trump supporter’s arguments for being a “White male.”

Origin

On March 11th, 2016, The Alex Jones Channel YouTube channel posted a video titled “Anti-Trump Protesters Go Berserk!”, featuring a heated argument between Trump supporters and anti-Trump activists taking place outside of a Trump rally in St. Louis, Missouri (shown below).



Spread

On March 12th, YouTuber chickenfingers991 posted an edited version of the video, focusing on clips of the two men interacting with the Trump supporter (shown below).



On March 16th, an anonymous 4chan user submitted a thread to /pol/,[2] identifying the Trump supporter in the video as YouTuber Owen Shroyer.[1] The same day, Redditor SherlockDoto submitted a video of one of the men proclaiming “You fucking white male” to the Trump supporter to /r/videos[4] (shown below, left). Over the next day, the video received upwards of 11,900 votes (67% upvoted) and 6,900 comments. Meanwhile, a clip of the other demonstrator saying “are you kidding me?” when asked to explain why Trump is similar to Adolf Hitler was upvoted to the top comment in the post (shown below, right).



On March 17th, Redditor turtledan87 uploaded a Just Girly Things-style image macro titled “#JustCarlThings” with the caption “Asking your wife’s boyfriend to vote for Sanders” (shown below). Within 24 hours, the post gained over 5,000 votes (65% upvoted) on the /r/The_Donald[3] subreddit.



Also on March 17th, a post asking about the meme was submitted to /r/OutOfTheLoop.[6] In the coming days, several 4chan[5] threads were created featuring images mocking the two anti-Trump demonstrators nicknamed “Carl the Cuck” and “AIDS Skrillex” (shown below).



Various Examples



Search Interest

External References

0.5x A Presses / But First We Need to Talk About Parallel Universes

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About

“SM64 – Watch for Rolling Rocks – 0.5x A Presses” is a video uploaded by the Super Mario 64 glitch exploiter pannenkoek2012, where he obtains one of the game’s stars through tool-assisted superplay (TAS). After the narrated version of the video was released, it went viral on 4chan‘s video game board /v/ due to the complex nature of its analysis, as well as the narrator’s peculiar wordings and phrasings, most notably “But First, We Need to Talk About Parallel Universes”.

Origin

On January 12th, 2016, the original gameplay was uploaded, featuring pannenkoek2012 using a Tool Assisted Software to obtain the star “Watch for Rolling Rocks” from the level Hazy Maze Cave using “half” of a press of the A button (by keeping it pressed from before Mario enters the level). The video gained over 13,000 views in the following week (shown below, left). The same day, a narrated version was released, explaining in detail the exploits used in the run. The most notable of these exploits was the use of “parallel universes”, faraway places where the game thinks Mario is standing in the level when he isn’t, which can be accessed with enough momentum. The narrated version gained over 200,000 views in the following week.



Spread

The same day as its release, the video was posted on /v/, where some users quickly picked up the parallel universes quote.[1] Though other threads about it were created,[4] the catchphrase didn’t catch on until a thread from January 17th, when it was featured along a distorted image of Mario’s head.[3] Prior to being archived, the thread gained over 500 replies.



Soon after, more threads were created on 4chan, flooding the board with jokes related to the video (shown bellow, left).[2] On January 18th, YouTuber João Mostarda uploaded a voice remix of the video titled “‘Henry’ builds speed for over 12 hours in order to cross the extent of QPUs to shitpost on Youtube”; this remix gained over 2,000 views in less than a day. In late January 2015, the video also got viral on Tumblr.[6][7]



Related Memes and In-Jokes

Scuttlebug

In the video, pannenkoek2012 uses a Scuttlebug (spider-like enemy) to reach the star, first attracting it in order to place it into the correct spot. Due this, Scuttlebug has gained some fan following.



Build Up Speed for Twelve Hours

One of the most notable parts of the video is when pannenkoek2012 builds up Mario’s speed over the course of 12 hours in order to be able to travel the parallel universes and reach the star. Due the absurd amount of time employed to gain speed, it has become a notable joke.



Misaligned QPUs

Quadruple Parallel Universes (QPU) is a term used by pannenkoek2012 in the video to describe the set of four PU that are needed to actually travel to a parallel universe (as the engine checks the hitboxes for errors 4 times during a movement). If Mario ends up out of bounds before he goes the full distance, the game cuts his movement short, aligning him incorrectly between QPUs. “Misalignments” make it much more difficult to return to the original level, putting Mario into a limbo of sorts. Because of this, the term has become an in-joke describing something negative, frightening, or frustrating.



TJ “Henry” Yoshi

TJ “Henry” Yoshi is a YouTube user who appeared in the video, questioning in a comment how the “A” button could be pressed a half time. His likeness has been used in the threads as a sort of archnemesis to Pannenkoek. Henry would later go on to do an AMA session on /v/.[5]



TJ Yoshi’s YouTube channel has seen an influx of spamming in the comments of his videos, with remarks pertaining to the original video. On January 18th, he uploaded a video in reference to those comments.



Various Examples



Search Interest

External References

Pacha Edits / When The Sun Hits That Ridge Just Right

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About

Pacha Edits refers to a photoshop meme based on several exploitable images of Pacha, one of the main characters featured in Disney‘s animated buddy comedy film series The Emperor’s New Groove, most notably a stillshot of the character signaling an OK gesture with his left hand in satisfaction. Since debuting on 4chan in late January 2016, the still shots of Pacha have spawned hundreds of photoshopped derivatives on numerous forums within the imageboard community, often accompanied by snowclone variants based on the quote “When The Sun Hits That Ridge Just Right.”

Origin

The pose originates from a scene in the 2000 Disney animated film The Emperor’s New Groove[11] wherein Pacha, a peasant father and one of supporting characters in the film series, informs Emperor Kuzco on the ideal spot for natural sunlight exposure atop the ridge where his hometown village is located. In late January 2016, 4chan users began using the still shot of Pacha’s “OK” hand gesture as a reaction image to express approval of a post.



Spread

On January 29th, 2016, a thread was started on 4chan’s /v/ (video games) board with a blank template of the Pacha image and a message encouraging others to recreate and share their own photoshopped versions.[1] After drawing hundreds of responses, the thread went on to spawn multiple copycat threads on other sub-forums within the community, most notably on /vp/ (Pokemon) and /co/ (Comics & Cartoons). A Danbooru.styled website was consquently created several days after the spike in popularity of the explotable.[12]

Various Examples




Template



External References

DURR PLANT

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DURRPLANT is a sarcastic phrase originally spoken by YouTube personality I Hate Everything in response to the “Damn Daniel” meme to make fun of its frivolous nature.

Origin

On February 23th, 2016, YouTuber I Hate Everything (IHE) uploaded a video[2] in which he discusses the popularity of the “Damn Daniel” clip[1] and goes on to explain why he disapproves of it in his usual outspoken fashion. At the 2:45 mark of the video, in a sarcastic attempt at demonstrating the senselessness of the “Damn Daniel” meme, IHE likens the crux of the joke to a clip of him pointing his finger at a plant and yelling “Durr Plant!!!” in a dopey accent (shown below). Within the first 48 hours of upload, IHE’s “Damn Daniel” rant video accumulated more than 728,000 views.



Spread

In the following hours, several parodies and remixes of IHE’s “DURRPLANT” gag began surfacing on YouTube[3] and Vine[4], with the earliest known instance sampling the soundbite uploaded by Viner Yoshi The Lion (shown below). In less than 48 hours, the Vine clip garnered over 12,000 loops. The vine was later deleted. That same day, Redditor Infinite901 created a dedicated subreddit[5] for parodies and remixes of IHE’s “Durr Plant” clip. On February 24th, YouTuber YeloPartyHat uploaded a remix of The Duck Song featuring the soundbite.



On March 3rd, IHE created another video discussing DURRPLANT, and joke thieves. The video received over half a million views in 3 days.



Various Examples


Search Interest



External References

Marge Krumping

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About

“Marge Krumping”, also known as “Marge Dance,” is a photoshop meme based on an exploitable still shot of The Simpsons character Marge Simpson trying to krump, a style of hip hop dance characterized by highly energetic and expressive movement of one’s head and the limbs.

Origin

The image stems from Episode 6, Season 19 of The Simpsons titled “Little Orphan Millie”[1] in a scene where Marge tries to cheer up Bart by attempting to krunk,[2] albeit unsuccessfully. The earliest known use of the exploitable can be found in a two-panel image of Marge trying to krump after looking at a digital clock that displays “420”, a time popularized in stoner culture as the time of day to smoke marijuana, which was posted on January 26th, 2016, to The Simpsons Shitposting page[5] on Facebook (shown below, right). The post garnered 1,800 likes and 1,000 shares within the first week.



Spread

On January 30th, a Facebook page[10] dedicated to the curation of the meme was launched under the name " Marge-Core." On January 31st, a photoshopped instance of The Top Ten Anime List parody that depicts Marge Krump battling Vegeta, a recurring character from Dragon Ball, was uploaded to Tumblr[3], where it accumulated over 50,000 notes in just over 72 hours. On February 2nd, Tumblr user Pickleplayer[4] uploaded a photoshopped GIF of Marge doing the Shoryuken move in a Street Fighter battle, where it gained over 16,000 notes. The two Tumblr posts have since inspired a slew of additional parodies, which can be found under the search query “Krumping Marge” on Tumblr.[6]



Various Examples



Search Interest



External References

Squidward Dab

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About

Squidward Dab is a Vine video of an amusement park employee doing The Dab while costumed as the SpongeBob SquarePants character Squidward at Universal Studios Orlando in January 2016. Upon entering online circulation through Vine, the video clip quickly went viral and spread to other social networking and media platforms like Tumblr, Twitter and Instagram.

Origin

The original video was recorded and uploaded by Deon_dunk to his Vine[2] and Instagram accounts on January 26th, 2016 (shown below). In just over a week, Deon_dunk’s Vine clip accrued more than 22 million loops. That same day, Instagram celebrity @Daquan[1] re-uploaded the original video to his account, where it garnered more than 259,000 likes within the same timespan.



Spread

As the original video continued to gain traction on Vine and spread elsewhere online, several remixes, mash-ups and parodies began to surface on Instagram[9], Twitter[6][7] and Tumblr.[8] On January 27th, 2016, Viner Michael K. uploaded a remix version featuring a tune from SpongeBob SquarePants (shown below), which gained seven million loops within the first week.



On January 28th, WorldStarHipHop tweeted a two-pane still image of the Squidward mascot doing the dab (shown below), accumulating over 2,800 retweets and 3,900 likes within a week.



Examples


Search Interest



External References


Hello Darkness, My Old Friend

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“Hello Darkness, My Old Friend” is the opening lyric from the 1964 soft rock song “The Sound of Silence” performed by the American folk rock duo Simon & Garfunkel. Online, the introduction of the song is often used as background music in a variety of parody and remix videos for dramatic effect.

Origin

In October 1964, Simon and Garfunkel released the song “The Sound of Silence” as a track on their debut studio album Wednesday Morning, 3 A.M., which features the lyrics “hello darkness, my old friend” in the first verse.



Hello darkness, my old friend
I’ve come to talk with you again
Because a vision softly creeping
Left its seeds while I was sleeping
And the vision that was planted in my brain
Still remains
Within the sound of silence

In May 2013, Season 4 of the American sitcom Arrested Development was released on Netflix, which contained several scenes featuring the song when the character Gob experiences a moment of deep regret (shown below). Following the season’s release, search interest for the phrases “hello darkness” and “hello darkness my old friend” saw a dramatic spike on Google Trends.



Spread

On July 8th, 2014, YouTuber Joe Bell uploaded a clip of the Sad Brazilian Fan with “The Sound of Silence” playing in the background (shown below, left). On July 30th, YouTuber convulsion0inc uploaded footage of electronic dance music producer David Guetta performing at the Tomorrowland music festival with “The Sound of Silence” dubbed in the background (shown below, right). The following day, Redditor dragonsky posted the video to the /r/youtubehaiku[4] subreddit. Within two years, the videos received upwards of 7.1 million views and 1.3 million views respectively (92% upvoted).



On January 27th, 2015, Redditor larperdoodle submitted a post titled “Hello dankness my old friend” followed by the phrase “I’ve come to browse your memes again” to the /r/dankmemes[6] subreddit. The same lyric was subsequently used in a page on the humor site DankMayMays[7] featuring the Gnome Child with “The Sound of Silence” playing in the background (shown below).



On February 7th, the /r/TheSoundofSilence[3] subreddit was launched, featuring various YouTube videos with the song edited into the background audio. On March 14th, YouTuber rockwillor uploaded footage of feminist protester Chanty Binx with “The Sound of Silence” verse playing at the end of the clip (shown below, left). On May 1st, YouTuber TeamZoo uploaded a video of a man appearing expressionless while riding a reverse bungee thrill ride with “The Sound of Silence” playing in the background (shown below, right). In four months, the video gained over 1.2 million views and 580 comments. On July 25th, Redditor beet111 submitted the video to the /r/videos[2] subreddit, where it received more than 5,700 upvotes (89% upvoted) and 700 comments in two months.



2016 Billboard Hot Rock Songs

On March 24th 2016, Yahoo! News published a video interview with the Batman V Superman: Dawn of Justice lead actors Ben Affleck and Henry Cavill, in which they were asked how they felt about the mixed to negative reviews the film had received. Cavill then took the lead in answering the question while Affleck remained seated in silence with a noticeably sad look on his face. That same day, YouTuber Sabconth created a parody of the interview clip titled Sad Affleck, featuring a collage of headlines from review articles, indicating the negative reception of the movie, set to the intro from “The Sound of Silence”(shown below). Within three weeks, the video gained more than 21 million views and 32,500 comments.



On March 29th, the heavy metal band Disturbed performed a live cover of “The Sound of Silence” during an appearance on the late night talk show Conan (shown below). Within two weeks of being uploaded to YouTube, a recording of the performance gathered upwards of 2.02 million views and 4,00 comments.



Billboard Hot Rock Chart

In April 2016, “The Sound of Silence” reached the No. 6 position on the Billboard’s Hot Rock Songs chart. On April 6th, Billboard[8] published an article revealing that the song’s resurgence in popularity was influenced by the Sad Affleck video and Disturbed’s cover. Additionally, Billboard reported that the song had reached the No. 2 position on the Rock Streaming Songs chart, with upwards of 5.6 million streams up 582 percent.

Various Examples



Search Interest

External References

Trying To Get My Grades Up

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About

“Trying to Get My Grades Up” is a catchphrase used by high school and college students to grieve about the helpless state of their academic grades, especially towards the end of each academic semester. On Twitter, the phrase is usually accompanied by photographs or animated GIFs depicting a variety of futile or ineffective attempts at accomplishing an infeasible goal.

Origin

The earliest known pairing of the phrase “me trying to get my grades up” and an image of a comically hopeless situation was shared on Twitter by @Raul____[3] on October 26th, 2013. The attached image shows Fez (portrayed by Wilmer Valderrama) of That ’70s Show attempting to seduce Jackie’s mom. In the following months, a number of variations on the same theme began to surface on Twitter as the end of the semester approached.



Spread

In 2014, the humorous tweets continued to grow in volume and became widely adopted by high school and college students on Twitter[5], Vine[9] and Tumblr[2] as a way to commiserate over their poor academic performance. The “me trying to get my grades up” jokes saw a significant spike between May and June as the end of the academic year approached in schools across the United States. In addition, a few, particularly well-received instances on Twitter were subsequently posted on 9gag[8] and Memes.com.[1]

Various Examples




Search Interest



External References

Is Mayonnaise an Instrument?

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“Is Mayonnaise an Instrument?” is a memorable quote from the animated children’s show SpongeBob SquarePants. Online a screenshot of Patrick asking the question on the show is accompianied by the quote replacing mayonnaise with other things that aren’t instruments, or the entire quote is altered so the text questions whether sometimething can be categorized as something it can not be categorized as.

Origin

On September 7th, 2001, an episode of SpongeBob Squarepants aired titled “Band Geeks”[1] which features Patrick asking Squidward:

“Is Mayonnaise an Instrument?”


The scene was first uploaded to YouTube by YouTuber cyberguy91[2] on August 19th, 2010. As of August 2014, the video has gained over 410,000 views.



Spread

On November 11th, 2009, the Facebook page[3]“Is Mayonnaise an Instrument” was created, as of August 2014, the page has gained over 24,000 likes.

On December 20th, 2011, YouTuber Jn s[4] uploaded a video titled “Is Mayonnaise An Instrument Dubstep Remix.” As of August 2014, the video has gained over 22,000 views. On March 10th, 2012, YouTuber sbatkk[5] uploaded a video titled “Is Mayonnaise an Instrument,” which features the scene on a 10 minute loop. As of August 2014, the video has gained over 38,000 views.



On November 14th, 2011, Urban Dictionary[6] user Hosta Mahogie posted an defintion of mayonnaise which reads:

“Something that is not, in fact, an instrument.”


On January 16th, 2014, Redditor Fluffy_Panda1729 asked for the origin of “Is mayonnaise an instrument?” on the /r/OutOfTheLoop/[7] subreddit. Redditor Dolphman answered:

“Spongebob, An American kids TV show that has been running from the late 90s to the present. The episode is named “Band geeks” and was released on September 7, 2001. The episode itself is consider one of the best in the series."


Notable Examples



Search Interest

External References

[1]SpongeBob Wikia – Band Geeks

[2]YouTube – cyberguy91

[3]Facebook – is mayonnaise and instrument

[4]YouTube – TeJoshta

[5]YouTube – sbatkk

[6]UrbanDictionary – mayonnaise

[7]Reddit – /r/OutOfTheLoop

Denied Encino Man

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About

Denied Encino Man is a reaction GIF of American actor Michael DeLuise shaking his head in disapproval in a scene from the 1992 comedy film Encino Man. On image boards and discussion forums, the reaction GIF is often used to convey disapproval or rejection of an idea once thought to be promising.

Origin

The 1992 American comedy film Encino Man was released on May 22nd, 1992. In the scene captured by the reaction GIF, Dave (Sean Austin) waves to his crush Robyn (Robin Tunney) and Matt (Michael DeLuise) quickly pops up in front of Robyn and shakes his head while wearing a grave expression. The clip was first uploaded to YouTube by Youtuber landmatter[2] on October 24th, 2008. As of June 2014, the video has gained over 20,000 views.



Spread

One of the earliest uses of the GIF as a reaction image was posted on the online Poker forum TwoPluTwo[3] on March 2nd, 2010, by user jt217 in response to user The Big Dirty’s question:

“Does anyone have the gif where the guy looks over at the girl and the other guy pops out shaking his head lol”


On October 12th, 2011, a user on Yahoo Answers[11] posed a question about the GIF’s scene asking:

“Whats the movie where a guy waves to a girl but then her boyfriend comes out of no where and shakes his head?”


A since deleted used answered Encino Man.

On May 16th, 2012, gif-central[10] published an entry titled “Encino Man-No” highlighting the GIF. On November 4th, 2012, Redditor plagued doctor posted an animated GIF that had characters from Team Fortress 2 recreating the GIF to the subreddit /r/tf2[9]. As of July 2014, the GIF has gained over 2,700 points.



The reaction GIF was posted on several Tumblr blogs in 2012, with the three gaining over 100 notes posted by mindlesscomfort[4], 6trash6boat6[5] and itsnoteasybeingginger.[6] In 2013, the two which gained over 100 notes were posted by foxx-ommok[7] and revoilluminati.[8]

Edits

The GIF has often been edited so the disapproving head shake is given by a specific person or shows disapproval for an image added within the GIF.



Search Interest

External References

Local Man Ruins Everything

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About

“Local Man Ruins Everything” is an image macro meme taken from the television show The Simpsons. The meme involves photoshopping someone’s image into the newspaper article under the headline “Local Man Ruins Everything.”

Origins

The meme originated from an episode of The Simpsons titled “Jaws Wired Shut,” which first aired on January 27th, 2002. The episode features a framed newspaper article with a picture of Homer Simpson under the headline “Local Man Ruins Everything.” The image first appeared online when Redditor oopsifell posted it to the r/Simpsons[1] subreddit on February 4th, 2013.

Spread

The image was added to the r/Simpsons Reddit on February 7th, 2014, by Redditor cayal3.

Notable examples




Related Memes

Florida Man

Florida Man is a Twitter feed that curates news headline descriptions of bizarre domestic incidents involving a male subject residing in the state of Florida. The tweets are meant to be humorously read as if they were perpetrated by a single individual dubbed “the world’s worst superhero.”

Search Interest

External References

Ran Off Da Plug Twice

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About

Ran Off Da Plug Twice is a viral dance meme in which people imitate a scene from the video for “Ritz Carlton” by the rapper Plies. The dance became popular worldwide after Americn football players adopted it as a touchdown dance.

Origin

The rapper Plies released the song “Ritz Carlton” as part of his “Ain’t No Mixtape Bih 2” mixtape in fall of 2015; the video was uploaded as a WorldStarHipHop exclusive on November 19th, 2015.[1] In the song, Plies says the lyric “run off on the plug twice.” A plug is generally defined by Urban Dictionary as someone from whom one would purchase drugs;[2] Plies appears to be bragging about not paying for drugs from the same person twice. Plies then says that he won’t be accepting calls from the plug.[3] The song was featured on Drake’sOVO Sound Radio Episode 14 for Apple Music. The World Star exclusive video received 6 million views in the first 4 months.



Spread

Odell Beckham Jr, a star football player, notable for popularizing The Whip, was recorded listening and singing along to the song while driving in early December in a video which was tweeted by Plies.[4] Users started dancing to the lyric shortly after this video and tagging Plies on social media shortly after; many of these videos were retweeted or regrammed by the rapper, or both.[5] In late December, college football players at Baylor University were captured doing the running man-style dance that Plies performs in the video after getting a touchdown.[6] The next day, players in Houston were recorded doing the dance as well;[7] in subsequent days, during the Orange Bowl, and at other sporting events, sports players were recorded doing the dance as a means of demonstrating triumph. Soon, the dance caught on with Instagram and Vine. There are over 5,200 photos tagged with #ranoffontheplugtwice[8] on Instagram; while there is no settled hashtag available on Vine, searches for the term bring up many results.[9]

Various Examples



Search Interest



External References

Oh Baby, a Triple!

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About

“Oh Baby, a Triple!" is a memorable quote said by a preadolescent video gamer in a YouTube video after eliminating three enemy players with one shot in an online match of Call of Duty: Modern Warfare. Since being uploaded online in 2010, the soundbite has been used in many montage parody videos to mock young and obnoxious gamers in online first-person shooters.

Origin

On February 7th, 2010, YouTuber LustruM uploaded in-game footage of a free-for-all match in Call of Duty: Modern Warfare in which a young boy is heard loudly rejoicing after killing three enemy players, who moving in a single file line, with one sniper rifle shot (shown below).

“Oh baby, a triple! Oh yeah! And that was my triple collateral on Free-For-All.”

Many viewers claimed the shot was faked since the enemy players did not appear to be attacking each other in the free-for-all mode. The original video no longer exists, but the one above has gained more than 3.9 million views as of September 2015.

Spread

On April 5th, 2010, YouTuber PersonGaming uploaded footage of a Call of Duty game in which a player kills three enemies at once with a claymore explosive, followed by the “Oh baby a triple” audio clip (shown below, left). On June 21st, a Facebook[1] page titled “Oh Baby a Triple” was launched. On April 9th, 2011, YouTuber lokovodo uploaded an EDM remix of the “Oh baby a triple” video (shown below, right).



On January 5th, 2012, YouTuber SerenityShotz uploaded a video titled “Oh Baby a Triple No Scope,” in which a Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2 player performs a “no scope” triple kill shot with a sniper rifle (shown below, left). On August 13th, 2013, YouTuber xcalizorz uploaded footage of himself playing a Call of Duty match in which he yells “Oh baby a triple” after getting a triple-kill (shown below).



On June 15th, 2014, YouTuber Dench Dank reuploaded the video, gaining over 2.4 million views and 2,900 comments over the next nine months. The same day, Redditor Jarzeh submitted the video to the /r/montageparodies subreddit, where it gathered more than 530 votes (99% upvoted) and 30 comments prior to being archived.

Various Examples



Search Interest

External References


The Dab

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About

The Dab or Dabbing, not to be confused with the recreational use of hash oil that goes by the same name, is a style of hip hop dance that involves dropping one’s head with one arm raised and resting the face inside the elbow of the other arm, which essentially resembles the gesture of a polite attempt at muffling a loud sneeze. Originating from the hip hop scene in Atlanta, Georgia, the dance became mainstream popular after numerous professional football players adopted it as a celebratory gesture during games in August 2015.

Origin

While “The Dab” trend is generally believed to have originated from Atlanta, Georgia’s hip-hop scene sometime during the first half of 2015[1], the question of who invented the dance move remains in dispute among several Atlanta-based hip hop artists and collectives, many of whom are affiliated with the record label Quality Control Music, including Migos, OG Maco, Skippa Da Flippa and Rich The Kid. According to Migos’ member Quavo, the dance has been gaining traction in Atlanta’s local hip-hop scene since as early as 2013, although it didn’t reach the tipping point on Internet hip hop communities until the local rappers began releasing songs and music videos that either feature the dance or lyrical references to The Dab during the summer of 2015, most notably Skippa Da Flippa’s “How Fast Can You Count It" and Migos’ “Look at My Dab” (shown below).



Etymology

The name of the dance itself its etymology has also come under dispute; In November 2015, a local FOX affiliate news station in South Carolina mistakenly reported that “The Dab” was named after Clemson University’s head football coach Dabo Swinney, which was quickly pointed out as an erroneous report by the readers, while many others jumped to the misassumption that “The Dab” is a reference to the act of “dabbing,”[2] a homonymous slang term for an unrelated emerging trend of smoking high-concentrate hash oil. In December 2015, the latter misinterpretation was most infamously put forth by rapper Bow Wow in a Facebook video, which similarly prompted online backlash and ridicule from others looped in the online hip hop communities.



Meanwhile, Quavo of Migos further added to the confusion by stating that the dance wasn’t even called “dabbing” during its onset:

“It wasn’t even called dab. We didn’t even know it was called dab. Y’all just called it the dab.”

Spread

Tutorials

On May 22nd, 2015, YouTuber T-Jay Hayes[8] uploaded one of the earliest tutorial videos for “The Dab” dance (shown below, left), racking up more than 2.3 million views within the first year. On July 30th, YouTuber Malik The Martian[9] uploaded another tutorial video in which Jay Pe$os demonstrates how to “hit the dab” (shown below, right).

News Media Coverage

On July 28th, music news site The Fader[7] reported on the emerging dance trend in an article titled “I Can’t Stop Watching These Videos Of Kids Dabbing In Atlanta,” which provided a description of the dance move and its brief history of origin, as well as a series of video examples that have been circulating on Instagram. On August 5th, hip hop news site XXLMag[3] also ran a similar article about “The Dab” craze, crediting Migos as the inventors of the dance move.

Dispute Over Origin

On the day after the publication of XXLMag’s article, a minor Twitter dispute arose between Migos[5] and their labelmate OG Maco[6] regarding the contentious issue of who came up with the Dab first. On August 6th, OG Maco tweeted a link to the XXLMag article and claimed that Skippa Da Flippa, another rapper signed with Quality Control Music, was the one that popularized The Dab, contrary to the article’s citation of Migos as the pioneer of the dance. In response, Migos tweeted back at OG Maco saying that Flippa is part of the Migos family, which sparked a brief yet awkward exchange of subtweets between the labelmates throughout the day.

Participation

Hip Hop Artists

Since rising to national prominence in August 2015, a number of well-known celebrity hip hop artists have jumped on the bandwagon by dabbing on stage during live performances and in music videos, including Future, Rich the Kid and Metro Boomin, among many others. In October, Jay-Z performed a shy variation of the dance move on stage at the Tidal 10/20 concert, which was met with mixed responses from the fans on Twitter. In December, 2 Chainz began selling “Dabbin Santa sweaters” through the merchandise shop on his website, which reportedly brought in almost $2 million in revenue by the end of the year.

Professional Athletes

By mid-September, “The Dab” had reached yet another major turning point when numerous professional athletes began adopting it as their celebratory dance on camera, beginning with Cincinnati Bengals’ running-back Jeremy Hill dabbing on the field during the game against the Oakland Raiders on September 13th, although the most well-known performance of “The Dab” to date by a professional athlete has been attributed to the Carolina Panthers’ quarterback Cameron Jerrell Newton dabbing after scoring a touchdown against the Seattle Seahawks on October 18th. In the following months, the celebratory dance trend continued to draw participation from other players in the National Football League (NFL), as well as other well-known athletes in the National Basketball Association (NBA), most notably Lebron James of the Cleveland Cavaliers and D’Angelo Russell of the Los Angeles Lakers, and Lorenzo Cain of the Kansas City Royals in the Major League Baseball (MLB). In January 2016, the dance craze made its way across the Atlantic Ocean and caught on with European football players, including Paul Pogba of Italian football club Juventus and Jesse Lingard of English football club Newcastle United.

Various Examples



Search Interest



External References

[1]Wikipedia – The Dab

[2]Urban Dictionary – Dabbing

[3]XXL Magazine – Atlanta’s Dabbin’ Dance Craze Is Taking Over Social Media

[4]Complex – OG Maco and Migos Got Into It on Twitter Over the Dabbin’ Dance

[5]Twitter – @MIGOS’ Tweet

[6]Twitter – @G_That_Guy23’s Tweet

[7]The Fader – I Can’t Stop Watching These Videos Of Kids Dabbing In Atlanta

[8]YouTube – Dabbin Dance Official Video

[9]YouTube – Jay Pe$os – Watch Me Dab

[10]DJBooth – Answered: What is the Dab Dance?

[11]Wikipedia – Yung Rich Nation

[12]The Daily Dot – Your guide to dabbing, a ‘new’ dance craze that already peaked

[13]Complex – LeBron Breaks Out the Dab Dance Before Cavaliers Scrimmage

[14]Complex – To Understand Where Jay Z Failed at Dabbing, You Must First Understand the Dab

[15]Stack – Introducing ‘Dabbin,’ the Dance Move All Your Favorite NBA Players Will Be Celebrating With This Season

[16]Sports Illustrated – ‘Dab on them folks;’ A brief history of the Dab dance in sports

[17]The Washington Post – Redskins don’t mind Cam Newton’s ‘dab’ dance

[18]SB Nation – South Carolina FOX affiliate mistakenly credits Dabo Swinney with inventing the Dab

[19]Vibe – Bow Wow Attempts To Explain The Origin Of “The Dab,” Gets Clowned By Migos

[20]World Star Hiphop – "Migos On Bow Wow’s Comments On The Dab Dance! He Don’t Know What He Talking About… He Trippin

[21]BETDeconstructing the Dab

[22]Rolling Stone – 2015’s Hottest Dance Crazes: The Dab, Hit the Quan and Beyond

[23]VH1 – And the Oscar for Best Dab Dance Goes to Tom Hanks

[24]Reddit – Why are athletes / entertainers doing the “Dab” and what does the name mean?

[25]CNNHillary Clinton dances on ‘Ellen’ again

[26]The Washington Post – Hillary Clinton does ‘the dab’ and another dance craze bites the dust -- or does it?

[27]YouTube – How To DAB (Dance) with Rich The Kid

[28]Instagram – @Retro_Spectro’s Instagram

[29]Instagram – @Beezy2fye’s Instagram

[30]Facebook – Bow Wow’s Video

[31]Forbes – 2 Chainz Conquers Christmas With ‘Dabbin’ Santa’

Here in My Garage

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About

Here in My Garage is an online video ad by American entrepreneur Tai Lopez that shows him standing in his garage in front of a Lamborghini sports car and urging viewers to visit his self improvement website. Throughout the first half of 2015, it was frequently featured as a pre-roll ad on YouTube, leading many users on the site to create remixes and parodies of the video.

Origin

In February 2015, YouTube began displaying a pre-roll ad featuring Tai Lopez showing off his Lamborghini and bookshelf while promoting his self improvement video program “67 Steps to Wealth, Health, Love, and Happiness” (shown below).



Spread

On February 6th, 2015, the Blogspot blog Some Final Words[3] published an article about Lopez’ career, which accused him of running a “fraudulent internet business.” On February 8th, Redditor go_sens submitted a post titled “Who is this guy that just bought a new Lamborghini that’s fun to drive up in the Hollywood Hills and brags about it on YouTube ads?” to the /r/OutOfTheLoop[1] subreddit. On February 23rd, YouTuber OneLineDerek uploaded a parody of the ad in which he mocks Lopez’ speech (shown below, left). On April 21st, YouTuber Craig has Dysentery uploaded a YouTube Poop of the Lopez ad titled “HereInMyGarage.mwv” (shown below, right). In the first three months, the video gained over 500,000 views and 350 comments.



On June 7th, Redditor andybiotic submitted a post titled “Here in my garage, just bought this new Pegassi here…”, featuring a screen captured image of the character Michael De Santa from the game Grand Theft Auto V standing in front of a sports car (shown below). In the first month, the post gathered upwards of 4,400 votes (90% upvoted) and 1,400 comments on the /r/gaming[4] subreddit.



On June 9th, YouTuber Vehicle Virgins uploaded a parody of the ad, in which he confesses that he can no longer afford to own a garage after purchasing a Lamborghini (shown below, left). On June 29th, Funny Or Die launched the site TaiLopez.website,[2] featuring parodies of various Tai Lopez promotional videos (shown below, right).



Various Examples



Search Interest

External References

"LeBron James" Kid

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About

“LeBron James” Kid is the nickname given to a young boy who repeatedly says the name of the famous American professional basketball player in a montage clip uploaded to Vine in June 2014. Similar to other mashup memes on the video-sharing platform, the soundbite of the boy saying “LeBron James” has been paired with various footage from TV shows, music videos and films, mainly for comedic effect.

Origin

The video clip was recorded by Viner DARius[1] and uploaded to Vine on June 27th, 2014, featuring his little brother saying the name of the NBA athlete in front of their house. As of March 2015, the video has garnered more than 31.7 million loops, 661,000 likes and 472,700 shares.




Spread

In late January of 2015, the clip underwent a huge spike in popularity. On January 20th, Viner Harley Conway uploaded a mashup in which the boy is substituted by an adult (shown below, left), which remains as the most popular instance of the remix series to date. On January 22nd, 2015, Viner William45[2] shared another remix pairing a scene from Taylor Swift’s music video for “Blank Space” with the “LeBron James” soundbite (shown below, right). In less than three months, the remix video received more than 256,700 likes, 181,200 shares and 13.8k comments. In the following months of 2015, a number of other remixes and mashups featuring the “LeBron James” kid continued to emerge on Vine.



Various Examples


External References

[1]- Vine – User DARius

[2]- Vine – User William45

Dat Boi

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“Dat Boi”, a colloquial pronunciation of “that boy,” is a phrase associated with various images featuring a 3D character model of a green frog on a unicycle, which are typically accompanied by the captions “here comes dat boi!” and “o shit waddup!”

Origin

In July 2014, FunnyJunk[4] user tehbestever posted a photoshopped image identifying a young boy named “Dat Boi” as the “most wanted criminal arrested” as “dat boi”



In June 2015, Tumblr user phalania submitted a post with the message “here come dat boi!!”, followed by a picture of the video game character Pac-Man with the caption “o shit waddup!” (shown below).[3] Although the original post was removed, reblogs managed to accumulate over 75,800 notes in the next year.



On April 3rd, 2016, the Facebook page Fresh Memes About the Mojave Desert and Other Delectable Cuisines posted an image of a green frog riding a unicycle with the caption “here come dat boi!!!!!! / o shit waddup!” (shown below).[8] The frog graphic originates from the Animation Factory Essential Collection 3.[7]



Spread

On February 23rd, 2016, Tumblr[5] user gollypon posted a breaking news parody image featuring Pac-Man along with the caption “Here come dat boi!” (shown below, left).On April 23rd, the Browse Dank Memes Tumblr[2] blog posted a multi-pane comic featuring a scene from 2012 superhero film The Avengers followed by the unicycle frog (shown below, right).



On April 26th, 2016, the tumblr user Browse Dank Memes[1] posted a poorly compressed image of a frog riding a unicycle with the caption “Here comes dat boi!” (shown below, left). On April 29th, Tumblr user casualchriss[6] submitted a photoshopped image of five unicycle riding frogs with the caption “We dem bois!!!!!” (shown below, right).



Various Examples



Search Interest



External References

Ghost Riding / Ghost Ride The Whip

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About

Ghost Riding is term used in “hyphy” culture that refers to the practice of dancing alongside, or on top of, a moving automobile. The car will usually be coasting in neutral gear while the participants are outside and loud music is playing from the moving vehicle.

Origin

Ghost Riding, or “Ghost-Riding The Whip” first became popular with E-40’s 2005 hit “Tell Me When To Go”(shown below, right) , and Mistah FAB’s “Ghost Ride It”, released in 2008 (shown below, left).



Ghost Riding may have first been inspired by the 1985 Michael J. Fox comedy Teen Wolf, in which a character does various tricks on top of a van with no driver.



Spread

There have been many ghost riding parodies on YouTube, generally used with the “Ghost Ride It” Mistah Fab audio track.A video of a group of people ghost riding a school bus titled “GHOSTRIDE IT” was uploaded to YouTube on December 18th, 2006. The video has since gained over 3 million views in under ten years.



On July 15th, 2007, a video of two elderly people Ghost Riding titled “Ghost Ridin’ Grandma” was uploaded to YouTube (shown below, left). In under 9 years the video has gained over 3 million views. The video was later posted to the Reddit subreddit /r/videos where it gained 1,339 points (80% upvoted) before being archived.[1]



Various Examples



Search Interest



External References

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