• Wikisimpsons needs more Featured Article, Picture, Quote, Episode and Comprehensive article nominations!
  • Wikisimpsons has a Discord server! Click here for your invite! Join to talk about the wiki, Simpsons and Tapped Out news, or just to talk to other users.
  • Make an account! It's easy, free, and your work on the wiki can be attributed to you.
TwitterFacebookDiscord

Memes and idioms

Wikisimpsons - The Simpsons Wiki
Revision as of 11:13, October 28, 2024 by SolarBot (talk | contribs) ("That's a paddlin'": replaced: Beardsley → Beardley)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)


A meme is something that spreads rapidly, becoming well known, usually around the Internet. The Simpsons has spawned a couple of memes over the years. An idiom is something that originated from something like a TV show, book, movie etc. but has became commonly used.

Memes[edit]

"That's a paddlin'"[edit]

"That's a paddlin'"
Main article: That's a paddlin'

"That's a paddlin'" was a quote used by Jasper Beardley in the season 6 episode "The PTA Disbands". The quote has achieved meme status, being used by numerous Simpsons fans on the Internet.

Dead Bart[edit]

Main article: Dead Bart

Dead Bart is a Creepypasta that has become well known over the Internet. Many fans have been led to believe that it is real, although it is not.

Graggle Simpson[edit]

Graggle Simpson

Graggle Simpson (also known as Gumbly Simpson. Weird Matt or Yellow Matt) is a fake lost character from The Simpsons. It was posted by an anonymous user on 2channel under the name of "Gumbly" in 2015, but it becomes a meme in 2021 and many fans have been led to believe that it is real with edited screenshots from various episodes and shorts to include the character and they remember his suppose appearance on The Simpsons (Mandela effect), although it is not. The fans alleged that the character's first appearance was in the short "Good Night" from The Tracey Ullman Show, along with the rest of the Simpson family.

The goggles do nothing![edit]

Originating from the quote by Rainier Wolfcastle "My eyes! The goggles do nothing!" from the season 7 episode "Radioactive Man", the quote has been shortened to simply "the goggles do nothing". It is now a popular catchphrase used for conveying the horror of having seen something unwanted.

"Milhouse is Not a Meme"[edit]

The phrase "Milhouse is Not a Meme" a paradoxical statement and a well-known debate on 4chan about what makes an Internet meme and what doesn't, using The Simpsons character Milhouse Van Houten as an example. Since the birth of the debate on 4chan in 2005, the phrase has been typically used to initiate a chain post of recursive nature. Due to its recurrence over time, "Milhouse is not a meme" is often referred to as a forced meme.

X Y is X[edit]

X Y is X (replacing "X" with a word and "Y" with another word) originated from the season 11 episode "Grift of the Magi". In the episode, Ralph said the phrase "fun toys are fun". This formula, also called "Redundant Adjective is Redundant", became some sort of a meme.

"You, sir, are and idiot"[edit]

"You, sir, are and idiot" is a slight corruption of the phrase "You, sir, are an idiot" said by Krusty the Clown in the season 9 episode "The Last Temptation of Krust". The "d" was added to the end of "an" by a 4chan poster to add an additional layer of irony.

"I must go, my people need me"[edit]

Taken from a line that Poochie (voiced by Roger Meyers, Jr.) said in the season 8 episode "The Itchy & Scratchy & Poochie Show", "I have to go now, my planet needs me" has achieved meme status. The quote came when, to write Poochie out of the show, they made Poochie an alien and said that he had to go back to his home planet. The frame then went upwards, simulating Poochie flying and then it was stated that Poochie died on his way to his home planet.

The misquote of "I must go, my people need me" as well as the "planet" variation are often edited onto pictures of someone in the air, looking like they are heading upwards into space.

Steamed Hams[edit]

Main article: Steamed Hams

A meme originating from the season 7 episode "22 Short Films About Springfield". The meme focuses on the segment of Principal Skinner and Superintendent Chalmers having a luncheon all the while Skinner tries to cover up suspicious things with lies. People have made parodies of the scene on websites such as YouTube.

Am I Disabled?[edit]

Main article: Am I Disabled?

Am I Disabled? is a reaction image originating from season 7's "King-Size Homer", where Homer was reading a pamphlet titled Am I Disabled?. Homer wanted to get a disability so he could skip the job's daily exercise so he read the pamphlet to see what he could do to get legally disabled.

Megaphone test[edit]

A meme originating from the season 8 episode "The Secret War of Lisa Simpson" where Bart attached many megaphones and said, "Testing!", causing various mishaps around Springfield.

Chair VS. Homer[edit]

A meme originating from the season 8 episode "A Milhouse Divided" where Bart hits Homer with a chair.

Hippo abuse[edit]

A meme originating from the season 19 episode "Mona Leaves-a" where toy hippos that Bart recorded his voice on mocked Homer with various insults such as, "Homer has a lard butt" and "cheese wang". Going berserk, Homer tore several of the toys up and stabbed one with a unicorn doll.

Idioms[edit]

Cheese-eating surrender monkeys[edit]

Originally said by Willie in the episode "'Round Springfield", this phrase has been used in other media, most notably by Jonah Goldberg after France's opposition to the invasion of Iraq.

"Cromulent"[edit]

Main article: Dictionary:Cromulent

"Cromulent", originally said by Lisa in the episode "Lisa the Iconoclast" entered the Webster's Dictionary.

"Kwyjibo"[edit]

Main article: Dictionary:Kwyjibo

Kwyjibo, a made-up word used by Bart in "Bart the Genius", has been used as one of the names of the Melissa computer virus, along with "Simpsons" and "Kwejeebo".

Meh[edit]

While not originating from The Simpsons, meh has been thought to be popularized by the show.

D'oh[edit]

Main article: D'oh

D'oh has been added into the Oxford English Dictionary. It is commonly used by people both over the Internet and in real life.

Both meme and idiom[edit]

"I, for one, welcome our new insect overlords"[edit]

Used by Kent Brockman in "Deep Space Homer", the phrase has now become used to express submission mockingly. It was also used in New Scientist magazine.

External links[edit]