How do you do fellow kids мем
How do you do fellow kids мем
Всё о меме «Стив Бушеми со скейтбордом»
Стив Бушеми со скейтбордом (How Do You Do, Fellow Kids?) – мем с актером Стивом Бушеми в красной кепке и толстовке, который держит за спиной скейтборд. Используется для высмеивания взрослых людей, которые пытаются выглядеть как подростки.
Происхождение
Кадр, ставший мемом, взят из сериала “Студия 30” (30 Rock), который выходил на NBC с 2006 по 2013 годы. В этом шоу Стив Бушеми играет частного детектива Ленни Возняка. В 8 серии 6 сезона Ленни рассказывает о своих прошлых расследованиях. Среди них – работа под прикрытием в школе.
Флешбек о том, как герой Бушеми маскировался под школьников, и стал основой для мемов. В сцене персонаж показан в красной кепке и толстовке, футболке с надписью Music Band. А в руках у него – два скейтборда.
В этой сцене Возняк обращается к школьникам с фразой How Do You Do, Fellow Kids (“Как дела, детишки?”) Цитата тоже стала частью общего мема.
Эпизод вышел в эфир 16 февраля 2012 года. Почти сразу скриншоты из него разошлись по соцсетям. Но мемом кадр с Бушеми стал только в октябре.
Долгое время это был просто мем-реакция. Картинку или гифку с наложенной цитатой How do you do fellow kids использовали, чтобы отреагировать на то, как взрослые пытаются выглядеть или действовать как подростки.
В 2014 году на Reddit запустили ветку r/fellowkids. Как можно догадаться, там собирают все случаи такого поведения.
К тому времени мем с Бушеми уже стал популярным. В рунете его обычно переводят следующим образом: “Как дела, детишки”.
Значение
Мем “Как дела детишки” – это ироничная реакция на то, как взрослые пытаются выглядеть или вести себя как подростки. Например, его можно использовать, когда 50-летняя звезда эстрады читает рэп или заводит блог в Тиктоке. Почти всегда такие попытки выглядят нелепо, это и выражает мем со Стивом Бушеми.
#мемы #соцсети
Мемные костюмы на Хэллоуин 2021. Стив Бушеми, “Игра в кальмара” и This Is Fine
Хэллоуин – традиционный для западного мира праздник, когда дома украшают тыквами и паутиной и надевают костюмы разных персонажей. Дети бегают к соседям за конфетами, а взрослые отправляются на вечеринки. На постсоветском пространстве День всех святых празднуют не так широко, но все же с каждым годом он становится все более популярным.
Для костюмов и декора люди используют разные сюжеты и идеи. Часто источников вдохновения служат мемы – люди наряжаются в героев мемов или используют мемные сюжеты в хэллоуинском декоре. Посмотрите на самые забавные мемные костюмы, тыквы и другие украшения с Хэллоуина 2021.
Спайдермены показывают друг на друга
На оригинале мема два Человека-паука показывают друг на друга. Но есть отфотошопленные версии, где их много. Эти парни пошли дальше и сделали косплей мема. Ведь не так уж сложно встретить человека в таком же костюме, как у тебя. Особенно если это такой известный герой как Спайдермен.
Лиззо в образе Малыша Йоды
Малыш Йода из сериала “Мандалорец” не так давно был суперпопулярным мемом. Но и сейчас у него много поклонников. Судя по костюму на Хэллоуин, певица Лиззо среди них.
How Do You Do, Fellow Kids?
Стив Бушеми – король Хэллоуина 2021. Он оделся в костюм своего героя из сериала “Студия 30”, который стал мемом о людях, которые пытаются казаться моложе. Действительно, зачем выдумывать костюм, если ты – живой мем?
Тыква кричит на тыкву
Мем про женщину, которая орет на кота, уже стал классикой. Он перебрался не только на футболки, но и на хэллоуинские тыквы. Да еще как мастерски проделана работа.
Кукла из “Игры в кальмара”
Корейский сериал “Игра в кальмара” стал мировой сенсацией в октябре, так что неудивильно, что костюмы из него были очень популярны. Но хочется отметить актрису Ли Ю-ми. В сериале она сыграла участницу под номером 240. А на Хэллоуин нарядилась куклой, которая следила за движениями игроков, и стала одним из самых узнаваемых мемов сериала.
Участники и охранники из “Игры в кальмара”
Если есть самый популярный сериал в истории Netflix, есть и костюмы его героев. Это, пожалуй, самый распростаненный вариант образа на Хэллоуин после вампиров, привидений и других классических страшных героев. “Игра в кальмара” подвинула Харли Квин и Джокера, чьи мемные костюмы были безумно популярны после выхода “Отряда самоубийц” в 2016 году.
Рик Эстли
Что может быть лучше старого доброго рикролла? Ничего, решил этот парнишка. И в очередной раз доказал, что жизнь некоторых мемов может быть настолько длинной, что успевают родиться и подрасти новые поколения поклонников.
Доктор Осьминог
Трейлер нового “Человека-паука” подарил нам мем с Доктором Осьминогом. Кажется, когда выйдет фильм, костюм этого злодея станет еще более актуальным.
This is fine
Все в огне и ты в огне, но держишься. Таков смысл мема This is fine. И кажется, во время новой волны коронавируса в некоторых странах, он выглядит актуально как никогда.
Финал “Игры престолов”
Хэллоуин должен быть страшным. А что может быть ужаснее, чем финал сериала “Игра престолов”? Эта девушка считает, что ничего. И миллионы разочарованных фанатов по всему миру с ней согласны.
Мы обязательно выживем
К сожалению, отпраздновать Хэллоуин в этом году смогли не все. Кто-то болеет коронавирусом, кто-то живет в городе с локдауном, кто-то очень занят и не нашел время на подготовку костюма. Но важно не отчаиваться и попробовать отпраздновать в следующем гожу. Мы обязательно выживем.
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«How Do You Do, Fellow Kids?» Meme
Popular:
«How Do You Do, Fellow Kids?»
About
«How Do You Do, Fellow Kids?» is a reaction image commonly used to respond to users pretending to be part of a community that they are clearly unfamiliar with. The image features the actor Steve Buscemi dressed youthfully and holding a skateboard, and is usually subtitled with the tag line. The image is often photoshopped to adapt to a particular subculture, and the phrase is often used in conversation without the image.
Origin
On February 16th, 2012, the 30 Rock episode «The Tuxedo Begins» (season six, episode 8). In the show, actor Steve Buscemi plays Lenny Wosniak, a private detective hired as a strike buster. [1]
In a scene where Wosniak is describing his prior investigations, he flashes back to a scene where he believes he successfully masqueraded as a high school student, parodying the TV show 21 Jump Street. [12] Buscemi, a 55-year-old at the time the episode aired, approaches a group of high school teens dress as a «one of them.» However, his grizzled appearance in contrast with his silly approximation of high school attire, which includes a backwards hat, a skateboard worn over his shoulder and a t-shirt that reads «Music Band» in the style of the classic AC/DC logo, is indicative of his poor and obvious disguise. As he approaches, he says, «How do you do, fellow kids?» The catchphrase has since come to represent all egregious attempts at appealing to subcultures.
Spread
A subtitled screen capture first began to appear online in spring of 2012, just as 30 Rock was about to air its last episode, because the moment was featured on many viewer’s lists of best jokes from the show. [2] From there, it spread as a reaction image.
On October 11th, 2012, We Know Memes posted the image, where it has since been shared more than 22,000 times.[]
The phrase is in frequent use on 4chan, where, for example it has 57 uses on the /v/, or video games, board. [4] The gif is more popular on Tumblr, and there are four separate blogs titled «How do you do, fellow kids.» [5] Several versions of the gif and image have more than 100,000 views on Imgur. [6]
On several web sites, including RedBubble and Skreened, the t-shirt Buscemi wears in the scene is available for sale. [7]
On August 2nd, 2014, Redditors three_am, dillonfbecker and Urplescurple [8] launched the subreddit /r/FellowKids. The subreddit is used to share examples of people or corporations trying to «be cool» and «blend in» with youth culture, often expressed through overuse of internet slang or emoji (examples below). [3] Within three years, the subreddit has garnered more than 194,000 subscribers.
On May 26th, 2016, Redditor bosoxdanc [10] posted a Bagel Bites-sponsored Facebook post to /r/FellowKids featuring an elderly man dressed as Steve Buscemi from the 30 Rock episode (shown below). The post, which read «God, this is really meta… and I like it,» received more than 27,000 points (90% upvoted) and 200 comments. On Imgur, the post received more than 6,000 points and 1.6 million views.
One year later, on June 13th, 2017, the Verge [11] published an article on the meme, asserting that it had become the very thing it originally mocked, a ploy for people posturing in subcultures. Writer Kaitlyn Tiffany says:
«According to my life experience, and to Google’s data, ‘How do you do, fellow kids?’ is more popular now than it was when the show it referenced was still a Thursday night staple for a national television audience that had so far seen only two Netflix original series and had never heard the phrase ‘peak TV.’ It is out of touch, out of date, and totally out of place in its current context. A meme of a meme, a monster that will kill me.
«How Do You Do, Fellow Kids?» Meme
Popular:
«How Do You Do, Fellow Kids?»
About
«How Do You Do, Fellow Kids?» is a reaction image commonly used to respond to users pretending to be part of a community that they are clearly unfamiliar with. The image features the actor Steve Buscemi dressed youthfully and holding a skateboard, and is usually subtitled with the tag line. The image is often photoshopped to adapt to a particular subculture, and the phrase is often used in conversation without the image.
Origin
On February 16th, 2012, the 30 Rock episode «The Tuxedo Begins» (season six, episode 8). In the show, actor Steve Buscemi plays Lenny Wosniak, a private detective hired as a strike buster. [1]
In a scene where Wosniak is describing his prior investigations, he flashes back to a scene where he believes he successfully masqueraded as a high school student, parodying the TV show 21 Jump Street. [12] Buscemi, a 55-year-old at the time the episode aired, approaches a group of high school teens dress as a «one of them.» However, his grizzled appearance in contrast with his silly approximation of high school attire, which includes a backwards hat, a skateboard worn over his shoulder and a t-shirt that reads «Music Band» in the style of the classic AC/DC logo, is indicative of his poor and obvious disguise. As he approaches, he says, «How do you do, fellow kids?» The catchphrase has since come to represent all egregious attempts at appealing to subcultures.
Spread
A subtitled screen capture first began to appear online in spring of 2012, just as 30 Rock was about to air its last episode, because the moment was featured on many viewer’s lists of best jokes from the show. [2] From there, it spread as a reaction image.
On October 11th, 2012, We Know Memes posted the image, where it has since been shared more than 22,000 times.[]
The phrase is in frequent use on 4chan, where, for example it has 57 uses on the /v/, or video games, board. [4] The gif is more popular on Tumblr, and there are four separate blogs titled «How do you do, fellow kids.» [5] Several versions of the gif and image have more than 100,000 views on Imgur. [6]
On several web sites, including RedBubble and Skreened, the t-shirt Buscemi wears in the scene is available for sale. [7]
On August 2nd, 2014, Redditors three_am, dillonfbecker and Urplescurple [8] launched the subreddit /r/FellowKids. The subreddit is used to share examples of people or corporations trying to «be cool» and «blend in» with youth culture, often expressed through overuse of internet slang or emoji (examples below). [3] Within three years, the subreddit has garnered more than 194,000 subscribers.
On May 26th, 2016, Redditor bosoxdanc [10] posted a Bagel Bites-sponsored Facebook post to /r/FellowKids featuring an elderly man dressed as Steve Buscemi from the 30 Rock episode (shown below). The post, which read «God, this is really meta… and I like it,» received more than 27,000 points (90% upvoted) and 200 comments. On Imgur, the post received more than 6,000 points and 1.6 million views.
One year later, on June 13th, 2017, the Verge [11] published an article on the meme, asserting that it had become the very thing it originally mocked, a ploy for people posturing in subcultures. Writer Kaitlyn Tiffany says:
«According to my life experience, and to Google’s data, ‘How do you do, fellow kids?’ is more popular now than it was when the show it referenced was still a Thursday night staple for a national television audience that had so far seen only two Netflix original series and had never heard the phrase ‘peak TV.’ It is out of touch, out of date, and totally out of place in its current context. A meme of a meme, a monster that will kill me.
«How Do You Do, Fellow Kids?» Meme
Popular:
«How Do You Do, Fellow Kids?»
About
«How Do You Do, Fellow Kids?» is a reaction image commonly used to respond to users pretending to be part of a community that they are clearly unfamiliar with. The image features the actor Steve Buscemi dressed youthfully and holding a skateboard, and is usually subtitled with the tag line. The image is often photoshopped to adapt to a particular subculture, and the phrase is often used in conversation without the image.
Origin
On February 16th, 2012, the 30 Rock episode «The Tuxedo Begins» (season six, episode 8). In the show, actor Steve Buscemi plays Lenny Wosniak, a private detective hired as a strike buster. [1]
In a scene where Wosniak is describing his prior investigations, he flashes back to a scene where he believes he successfully masqueraded as a high school student, parodying the TV show 21 Jump Street. [12] Buscemi, a 55-year-old at the time the episode aired, approaches a group of high school teens dress as a «one of them.» However, his grizzled appearance in contrast with his silly approximation of high school attire, which includes a backwards hat, a skateboard worn over his shoulder and a t-shirt that reads «Music Band» in the style of the classic AC/DC logo, is indicative of his poor and obvious disguise. As he approaches, he says, «How do you do, fellow kids?» The catchphrase has since come to represent all egregious attempts at appealing to subcultures.
Spread
A subtitled screen capture first began to appear online in spring of 2012, just as 30 Rock was about to air its last episode, because the moment was featured on many viewer’s lists of best jokes from the show. [2] From there, it spread as a reaction image.
On October 11th, 2012, We Know Memes posted the image, where it has since been shared more than 22,000 times.[]
The phrase is in frequent use on 4chan, where, for example it has 57 uses on the /v/, or video games, board. [4] The gif is more popular on Tumblr, and there are four separate blogs titled «How do you do, fellow kids.» [5] Several versions of the gif and image have more than 100,000 views on Imgur. [6]
On several web sites, including RedBubble and Skreened, the t-shirt Buscemi wears in the scene is available for sale. [7]
On August 2nd, 2014, Redditors three_am, dillonfbecker and Urplescurple [8] launched the subreddit /r/FellowKids. The subreddit is used to share examples of people or corporations trying to «be cool» and «blend in» with youth culture, often expressed through overuse of internet slang or emoji (examples below). [3] Within three years, the subreddit has garnered more than 194,000 subscribers.
On May 26th, 2016, Redditor bosoxdanc [10] posted a Bagel Bites-sponsored Facebook post to /r/FellowKids featuring an elderly man dressed as Steve Buscemi from the 30 Rock episode (shown below). The post, which read «God, this is really meta… and I like it,» received more than 27,000 points (90% upvoted) and 200 comments. On Imgur, the post received more than 6,000 points and 1.6 million views.
One year later, on June 13th, 2017, the Verge [11] published an article on the meme, asserting that it had become the very thing it originally mocked, a ploy for people posturing in subcultures. Writer Kaitlyn Tiffany says:
«According to my life experience, and to Google’s data, ‘How do you do, fellow kids?’ is more popular now than it was when the show it referenced was still a Thursday night staple for a national television audience that had so far seen only two Netflix original series and had never heard the phrase ‘peak TV.’ It is out of touch, out of date, and totally out of place in its current context. A meme of a meme, a monster that will kill me.