Spongebob Squarepants memes can be used to mock the president. They can be used to explain Radiohead albums. And they can be used to express whatever hot take you can muster.
Basically, Spongebob Squarepants is a neverending meme factory, and that rule was proven true yet again at Saturday’s March For Our Lives protests.
Tomi Lahren might not have understood the point of the protests, but luckily, Spongebob was there to explain it all.
There’s a SpongeBob theme running through the #marchforourlives.
— Kayla Epstein 📰 (@KaylaEpstein) March 24, 2018
Madison Kambic, 22, is studying to be a teacher. Her sign is “making fun of the fact that politicians are just saying words and not doing [anything].”
“The kids will get it.” pic.twitter.com/SwiuDQKZoR
More SpongeBob memes, this time from Miranda Henry, 20.
— Kayla Epstein 📰 (@KaylaEpstein) March 24, 2018
“In horrible times you need some light. Adding humor gets attention.”
“This is such a relevant meme right now.” pic.twitter.com/v1XwKMFesL
the #MarchForOurLives poster to end all krusty krab vs. chum bucket with a tweetception #SpongeBob #NeverAgain pic.twitter.com/gedx1Oubmc
— liam (@liamjhorgan) March 24, 2018
So here for the Spongebob signs #MarchForOurLives pic.twitter.com/EPKri5dZe1
— jake lazaroff (@jlazaroff) March 24, 2018
https://twitter.com/4evrmalone/status/977609470858727428
https://twitter.com/Boecker_Marcus/status/977606368705306624
Spongebob, of course, wasn’t the only subject matter on the signs of the hundreds of thousands of people who marched Saturday. Here were a few more of the best we saw.