Internet Culture

The ‘gonna tell my kids’ meme is revisionist history at its most absurd

Your kids will be so confused…

Photo of Stacey Ritzen

Stacey Ritzen

gonna tell my kids meme

One of the best things about having kids (or so I would have to imagine) that goes beyond creating an actual tiny human whose face lights up every time they see you is that kids will believe quite literally anything you tell them. Just think about it. Think about how absurd it is that we tell children that a fat man comes down the chimney every Christmas to deliver gifts, or that a giant-ass rabbit brings them a basket on Easter. It’s madness! Yet, they accept these terrifying notions at face value, mostly because they involve toys and candy. It’s this inherent gullibility we have partially to thank for the “gonna tell my kids” meme.

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The meme began in earnest back in September when Twitter user @Wake_n_Bacon tweeted out a joke at the expense of Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau amid yet another brownface scandal. In this instance, it was over a costume he wore to an “Arabian Nights” themed party in 2001.

“I gonna tell my kids in 2055 that this was Justin Trudeau,” read the tweet, accompanied by an image of the “Mr. Popo” character from Dragon Ball Z.

https://twitter.com/Wake_n_Bacon/status/1174808222441639936

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Fast forward to November, when the rest of Twitter began picking up on the joke. Some of the earliest known examples involved jokes about former President Barack Obama. On Nov. 11, user @ech0astral posted the following image of rapper Chief Keef standing behind a White House podium, writing: “I’m gonna tell my kids this was Barack Obama.”

https://twitter.com/ech0astral/status/1194068267473756161

Others soon followed, featuring Gus Fring from Breaking Bad (Giancarlo Esposito), Tyler the Creator, Drake, and others.

https://twitter.com/lowendfury/status/1194811049423147008

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https://twitter.com/miliondollameat/status/1196113330022293504

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Others then got in on the “gonna tell my kids” meme, making jokes at the expense of other historical figures such as the founding fathers, Abraham Lincoln, and the Kennedys, and so on.

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https://twitter.com/MsPackyetti/status/1196863221451374592

And then some people got really absurd with it, mixing up Elvis for the singer of My Chemical Romance, Elon Musk for literally Iron Man, and a hairpiece-wearing Kevin from The Office for Ashton Kutcher.

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https://twitter.com/ChickenAlfonso/status/1196136554193920002

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And then, of course, brands such as Netflix added valuable contributions to the “gonna tell my kids” meme.

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While we can’t advocate that you actually tell your kids any of these lies, we also can’t necessarily advocate that you don’t. Grades are overrated, right?

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The Daily Dot